Nollywood has never lacked premium weepers, the kind of actor who can cry so convincingly that you start feeling bad for a character they played years later.

Whether it’s the one-tear-drop pros, the floor-rolling sobbers, or the ones that throw their entire body on the ground like they just lost their life savings to a Ponzi scheme, the art of crying is a serious performance skill, and some of your faves have mastered it like PhD holders in Pain.

In this ranking, we count down twelve of Nollywood’s best on-screen criers, from the legends weeping since the VCD era to the new school actors shedding tears like no man’s business.

Here are the 12 best on-screen criers in Nollywood, ranked.

12. Emeka Nwagbaraocha

Series: Far from Home (2023)
Role: Frank

Emeka Nwagbaraocha might look like a heartbreaker, but he’s also a masterful crier, the kind that makes you pause mid-episode and ask, “Where are this boy’s parents?” His tears aren’t loud or dramatic; they sneak up on you, subtle but sharp, carrying a quiet intensity that stays with you.

In Far From Home, he plays Frank, a gentle student trying to survive at an elite school filled with secrets, privilege, and pressure. As Ishaya’s best friend, Frank often finds himself bruised by other people’s decisions. But no matter how messy things get, Nwagbaraocha delivers emotional truth with restraint, earning him a solid spot among Nollywood’s most promising new-gen criers.

Watch Far From Home on Netflix.

11. Rita Edochie

Movie: No More War (2004)

Role: Nneoba

If you see Rita Edochie on a VCD cover, crying with her head tie slipping off, just know somebody’s child is either missing, cursed, or being dragged to the village shrine. She delivers motherly pain with spiritual authority. Her crying scenes carry urgency, cultural weight, and the kind of tears that call down justice from the gods.

Whether she’s playing a suffering mother, a misunderstood wife, or an ogbanje summoner, Edochie’s emotions are loud, raw, and unforgettable. In No More War, she turns in one of her most iconic performances as Nneoba, a mother shattered by the unjust imprisonment of her son. It’s the kind of wailing that echoes long after the credits roll.

Watch No More War on YouTube.

10. Ini Edo

Movie: Tears For Nancy (2005)

Role: Nancy

Ini Edo can cry just as convincingly as she can serve bad bitch energy when the role demands it. Back in the days of Part 1, 2, and 3 Nollywood classics, she didn’t just show up with beauty. She showed up with award-worthy sobs.

Often cast as the village girl, the betrayed lover, or the suffering sister, Ini Edo made crying an art form. Her signature style? Snotty tears paired with dramatic monologues that could stop a scene cold. She was deep in her crier era in Tears for Nancy, where she plays a pregnant woman torn between her hostile family and her fiancé’s equally chaotic clan.

Watch Tears For Nancy on YouTube.

9. Chioma Akpotha

Movie: Gangs of Lagos (2022)

Role: Mama Ify

Chioma Akpotha is the queen of silent tears and restrained pain—the kind where a single tear rolls down her cheek as she stares into space like her whole world just crumbled. She doesn’t just cry; she performs grief. Every tear feels earned, loaded with backstory, heartbreak, and at least one injustice.

Once she starts crying on screen, the vibe shifts from “I’m fine” to “God, why me?” in 30 seconds flat. In Gangs of Lagos, she delivers a gut-wrenching performance as Mama Ify, a mother shattered by the loss of her son, a rising artist killed by gang violence. It’s the kind of pain you don’t just watch—you feel.

Watch Gangs of Lagos on Prime Video.

8. Hilda Dokubo

Movie: Stigma (2013)

Role: Ibiso

From the quiet, dignified tears of a suffering mother to the chest-clutching, floor-rolling cries of a broken woman, Hilda Dokubo had range—and she used every bit of it.

When she cries, it’s not just sorrow—it’s a spiritual warning. It feels like she’s about to call down thunder on whoever wronged her. One of her standout crying roles is in Stigma, a 2013 Nollywood drama about HIV/AIDS and the cruel weight of stigma in Nigeria. As Ibiso, a mother navigating grief, discrimination, and loss, Dokubo delivers emotion so raw it feels personal.

Stigma is not currently streaming but watch this excerpt on YouTube.

7. Mercy Johnson

Movie: Weeping Soul (2009)

Role: Amarachi

There’s no role Mercy Johnson hasn’t mastered—from the long-suffering house girl to the village sweetheart courted by royalty, to heartbroken lover and tormented ghost.

And when it’s time to cry? Best believe she delivers classic screamers. If you grew up watching Nollywood in the 2000s, there’s a 98% chance you shed tears simply because Mercy started crying first. From her breakout in The Maid to fan favourites like Weeping Soul—a film that explores the emotional struggles of an orphan fighting for dignity—Mercy makes pain feel personal. Her emotions don’t just show up, they slap.

Watch Weeping Soul on YouTube.



6. Tola Oladokun

Movie: Jellili (2011)

Role: Iya Jelleli

Tola Oladokun is a veteran of Yoruba Nollywood—famously Jenifa’s mother in Funke Akindele’s hit franchise—but she’s equally renowned as a certified “tear-bringer” in YouTube dramas and emotional thrillers. Whether she’s pleading in the market or collapsing under the weight of poverty, her sobs feel like they’ve been brewing for a lifetime.

Her strength lies in family-centric roles where every tear hints at untold hardship. If there were an award for Nollywood’s most reliable crier, her turn in Idoti Oju would win hands down.

In Jellili, she embodies a mother pushed to her breaking point by her wayward child—her tears carrying the echoes of years of sacrifice, frustration and sorrow.

Watch Jellili on YouTube.

5. Tunbosun Odunsi

Movie: Ayitale (2013)

Role: Aremu

If you’re an avid viewer of Yoruba movies, you likely know Tunbosun Odunsi. He belongs to the class of quiet legends—the actors who may not always be front and centre in blockbusters, but whose acting chops are undeniable. While he may not be a “tear-machine” like Hilda Dokubo or Lateef Adedimeji, when he cries, you feel it.

His emotional delivery leans away from melodrama and into something more grounded—subtle, restrained pain that doesn’t need wailing or floor-rolling to break your heart. In Ayitale, he plays Aremu, a father caught in a moral and spiritual storm that slowly unravels his world. His tears don’t beg for attention—they earn your respect.

Ayitale is currently on YouTube.

4. Bukunmi Oluwashina

Movie: Ayomi (2015)

Role: Rantimi

If we’re talking Gen Z Nollywood criers, Bukunmi Oluwashina is top-tier. Whether she’s heartbroken, betrayed, or just trying to survive in a wicked world, her tears always come soaked in intensity and delivered with full-body commitment.

She often writes and stars in her own films, so when she’s crying on screen, just know she scripted that heartbreak herself. One of her most powerful performances is in Ayomi, where she plays Rantimi, a young woman navigating love, trauma, and the weight of generational pain with a vulnerability that cuts deep.

Watch Ayomi on YouTube.

3. Chinwe Owoh

Movie: Mothering Sunday (2001)

Role: Nnewa Senior

Let’s keep it a buck, Chinwe Owoh didn’t just act in Nollywood movies, she suffered. If you grew up watching Nollywood in the 2000s, you knew that the moment she started crying, the movie had officially entered its tragic phase.

From losing her children to being thrown out of the house, to crying on the bare floor of a village compound with dust in her mouth, Chinwe Owoh gave Oscar-level wailing every single time. She was typecast as the suffering widow, the abandoned mother, the poor villager constantly dealt a cruel hand by life. In Mothering Sunday, she plays Mama Ejike, a grieving mother whose entire world collapses in slow motion—and you feel every second of it.

Watch Mothering Sunday on YouTube.

2. Nkiru Sylvanus

Movie: A Cry For Help (2002)

Role: Blessing (Bleh Bleh)

In the early 2000s, Nkiru Sylvanus didn’t just cry in movies—she made crying a career. With red eyes, trembling lips, and tears pulled straight from the soul, she cried for at least half the runtime in every film. She specialised in the “poor innocent girl” role—an orphan, a maid, a village girl, or the unlucky daughter life just refused to favour.

Once the camera zoomed in and the piano soundtrack started playing, you knew Nkiru was about to cry like rent was due. In A Cry for Help, she plays Blessing, a vulnerable young woman whose desperation and misfortunes trigger a masterclass in emotional breakdown.

Watch A Cry For Help on YouTube.

1. Lateef Adedimeji

Movie: 07:07 (2018)

Role: Deji

Lateef Adedimeji is one of the most expressive criers in modern Nollywood. His crying performances are so intense, you’d think someone stole his destiny. Whether it’s Yoruba epics or contemporary dramas, he brings the ugly cry, the sniffling cry, the “body-shaking like generator” cry—and somehow makes it feel authentic every single time. His facial expressions do 70% of the work; the tears handle the rest.

In any film where he’s a struggling son, a wrongfully accused man, or dealing with unrequited love, just know the tears are loading. In 07:07, he plays Deji, a man with a wife battling cancer, and delivers a crying performance that should be studied in acting school.

Watch 07:07 on YouTube.


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