‘We Own This City’ Has The Good Taste To Cast Rising ‘Lovecraft Country’ And ‘Loki’ Star Wunmi Mosaku

The ensemble cast of HBO’sWe Own This Citycontinues to grow and thankfully now includesWunmi Mosaku.

Coming off her roles in HBO’sLovecraft Countryand Disney’s latest MCU seriesLoki, Mosaku is a quickly rising star and welcome addition to the six-hour limited series. Previously announced cast members includeJon Berenthal,Josh Charles, andJamie Hector. WithReinaldo Marcus Greenset to direct and executive produce the series, the show sounds promising, especially coming fromThe WirecreatorDavid Simon.

His House

Set in the aftermath of Freddie Gray’s murder, a young Black man killed in police custody, the series will center around the 2015 Baltimore riots as citizens demand justice for Gray. With violent crimes surging, the city reaches its highest murder count in more than two decades: 342 homicides in a city of 600,000 people.

The series will center on rampant police corruption in a city that turns to drug prohibition and mass arrests. Via Deadline, Mosaku will play a Civil Rights Attorney investigating the police practices in Baltimore prior to the Gun Trace Task Force criminal investigation. The series will be written by David Simon andGeorge Pelecanos.

Wunmi Mosaku is a Rising Star

Mosaku has been showing up across screens this past year, starring in shows on HBO and Disney+, along with the recent Netflix horror filmHis House. Not only is her range astounding, but she clearly has a knack for picking interesting projects.

HBO’sLovecraft Countrywas a hot topic of discussion during its 2020 release period. Mosaku played the no-nonsense Ruby Baptise, who grinded her way through life on the Southside of 1950s Chicago. Over the course of the series, Ruby goes through a darkly magical metamorphosis. Her arc explores the concept of whiteness as currency, all the while seeding in horror, grief, and paranoia. It’s not unlike her role as Rial inHis House, a character that struggles against a society trying to mold her, balancing blending in and maintaining any semblance of her own identity. Despite struggles and missteps, Mosaku portrays these women with compassion and independence — wonderfully complex all the way through.

As Hunter B-15, a member of the Time Variance Authority, Mosaku is chronicling yet more growth in a complex woman, consistently stealing scenes. Mosaku was racking up credits long before her recent parts, with roles in blockbustersBatman v Superman: Dawn of JusticeandFantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them.Other notable credits include a four-episode stint onLuther, the Idris Elba-led crime drama, and a recurring role in season 2 of Netflix’s dark-comedyThe End of The F***ing World.

In 2017, Mosaku earned A British Academy Television Award (BAFTA) for her supporting role in the filmDamilola, Our Loved Boy, becoming the second Black actress in 62 years to win a BAFTA. In a recent interview withEssence, Mosaku noted that even history-making awards don’t make waves in the industry or change the roles available to her. She added:

“It’s still up to the people who are making the shows. A writer can write something, and then an executive producer can say, ‘No, we want them to look like this.’ Nothing happens overnight. But the only reason why I have a BAFTA is the Black actresses who came before me, who put in the legwork. It’s changing, but it’s slow.”

These tendencies of Hollywood should come as no surprise, least of all when it’s about a dark-skinned, curvy Black woman. But Mosaku is immensely talented and will undoubtedly deliver on her role onWe Own This City. Hopefully, she continues getting roles that allow her talent to shine. The more on-screen time she gets, the better for audiences.