Nondumiso Tembe
Appearance
Nondumiso Tembe (born 15 December 1987), is a South African actress, singer, songwriter, dancer and writer. She is best known for the roles in many Hollywood television serials such as; NCIS: Los Angeles, True Blood, Castle and Six.
Quotes
[edit]- Take the time to develop and study the craft – go to school. Take it seriously as a profession and honour your talent the same way you would if you wanted to become a doctor or a lawyer.
- Strive for excellence all the time. Be responsible about the kind of work you do and the kind of a social impact it can make.
- Be good to people – the industry is surprisingly small and people remember. Stay humble and true to yourself. And most importantly, be fiercely brave!
- Hanging With Nondumiso Tembe Bona (retrieved 7 November 2025)
- The arts have always been a part of my life and they are in my blood. This is my God-given calling. I am just walking out my purpose and my calling in life.
- I’ve always had a very deep passion for social justice and social justice issues, being a black child born under apartheid in the 1980’s. That had a very deep impact on me and my heart. That passion was always also inside of me and I’ve also felt very passionate about empowering young people especially from under privileged backgrounds in particularly in my community through education and the performing arts.
- Actors need to really master the art of compassion and of non-judgement and in order to do that you have to have a very broad and diverse experience of the world.
- I have always been hungry for education and information and just really keen to understand the world better and I am really just fascinated by different people and different cultures and histories.
- I’ve always been very clear that I don’t want fame and fortune. I want diversity and longevity in my career and to really do work that makes a really meaningful impact on the world.
- A Conversation with Nondumiso Tembe Sarafina magazine (13 September 2017)
- As a Black actor, I have to do my job just like everybody else in the room, but half of the energy that should be spent focusing on excelling in my craft has to go elsewhere. I have the added burden of constantly having to fight with writers, directors, or producers to fix a racist script or to keep my character from being portrayed in a way that perpetuates age-old, racist stereotypes.
- I have to explain why certain terms are racially offensive. And then there are the humiliating fights over why I deserve to have a hairstylist who understands my hair texture because White stylists are damaging my hair or don’t know how to work with it. The same goes for makeup artists. They may be obviously painting my face the wrong color, but then they’ll get irritated and defensive when I point this out, telling me to bring my own foundation and powder because they did not care to invest in a broader range of makeup that would cater to actors of all shades
- Or how about when they hire a White stunt double to do your stunts, whom they put in blackface? And then when you report these things to the higher-ups, you’re often met with arrogance and dismissal. There’s this attitude that you’re hypersensitive or just causing trouble and being an inconvenience. You’ll be told that no one else has a problem with the hair and makeup stylists.
- You are constantly having to defend why you are standing up for yourself when you are the victim.
- Black artists are tired of having to beg for crumbs from the industry’s table when we are just as talented, qualified, and worthy of opportunities as our White counterparts. We don’t need anybody’s crumbs; we have already earned our seats at the table.
- We are no longer asking for things to change, to be more just and equitable.
- As artists and storytellers, our work is to reflect humanity back to itself and to steer people’s aspirations. We are the doctors of the human soul. We are healers and educators.
- Nondumiso Tembe on Her Experience as a Black Actor in Hollywood Casting Networks (24 July 2020)
