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Osas Ighodaro’s Bollywood role has put the Nollywood star in the global spotlight, as she lands the lead in ‘Imported Bahu,’ a cross-cultural series uniting Nigerian and Indian film talent.

Inside Osas Ighodaro’s Bollywood role
The actress stars alongside Bollywood actor Rajniesh Duggall in the series, which premieres on July 2, 2026, on the streaming platform LebaraPlay. The story centres on romance, family secrets and cross-cultural relationships, blending the storytelling traditions of two of the world’s busiest film industries.
Created by filmmaker Hamisha Daryani Ahuja, ‘Imported Bahu’ is billed as a collaboration between Nollywood and Bollywood, described as a tale of ‘love, family, secrets, and one Imported Bahu who turns everything upside down.’
A new kind of project
The series is Forever 7 Entertainment’s first vertical micro-drama, a fast-paced format designed for mobile viewing and short, punchy episodes. The approach reflects how streaming platforms are experimenting with new ways to reach younger, phone-first audiences.
For Ighodaro, taking the lead in such a project marks a notable step beyond the Nigerian screen and into a wider international market.
A rising profile
Ighodaro is already an established name in Nollywood, with a string of film and television credits and a strong following across the continent. Crossing into a Bollywood-linked production extends her reach into one of the largest entertainment markets on earth.
Fans have welcomed the move online, framing it as another example of Nigerian talent finding opportunities far beyond home.
Why it matters
Osas Ighodaro’s Bollywood role highlights the growing appetite for collaboration between Nollywood and global film industries. Such partnerships can open doors for Nigerian actors, crews and stories on bigger international platforms.
Cross-cultural projects also broaden audiences for African storytelling, exposing Nollywood’s style and stars to viewers who might never otherwise encounter them. As streaming erases old borders, more of these team-ups are likely to follow.
Nollywood goes global
Ighodaro’s casting reflects a broader moment for Nollywood, one of the world’s most prolific film industries, as it pushes onto international streaming platforms and into cross-border co-productions. Nigerian films and series are increasingly finding audiences abroad, and partnerships with industries like Bollywood open new creative and commercial doors for the country’s actors and storytellers.
For audiences, such collaborations blend cultures, music, fashion and narrative styles in ways that can travel widely. For the talent involved, they offer exposure to new markets, working methods and fan bases. As global platforms hunt for fresh, diverse content, observers expect more Nigerian stars to take on international roles, carrying Nollywood’s storytelling to viewers who might otherwise never encounter it.
The vertical micro-drama format also says something about where streaming is heading. Designed for phones and built around short, addictive episodes, these series target younger viewers with shrinking attention spans and a preference for mobile content. By taking a lead role in such a project, Ighodaro positions herself at the cutting edge of how stories are consumed, not just where they are made. If the format succeeds, it could become a new pathway for Nigerian actors to reach global audiences quickly, without the long production cycles of traditional film and television.
Viorah TV will be watching how ‘Imported Bahu’ performs and what it means for the next wave of Nigerian talent going global.