Uganda’s film and television industry is undergoing a quiet but important shift.
More women are appearing at the center of the stories audiences watch, and increasingly, they are shaping the narratives behind the camera as well.
This evolution is about more than representation. It is influencing how power is understood, how careers develop and how societies imagine leadership.
For many years, women in Ugandan film and television were largely confined to predictable roles on screen and underrepresented behind the camera.
Female characters were often secondary to male narratives, while the technical and decision-making spaces of directing, writing, and production leadership remained heavily male-dominated. That dynamic shaped perceptions of leadership, authority and ambition.
That reality is on a steady, progressive course.
Across Uganda’s growing television and film landscape, women are increasingly occupying central narrative roles and influencing the stories being told.
Female characters are no longer limited to archetypes; they are complex protagonists navigating power, ambition, relationships and moral conflict.

Just like Pearl Magic Prime’s new telenovela, Loving Beyond, features strong female characters who navigate loyalty, ambition, family expectations, and forbidden love while challenging the legacies and rivalries that divide their communities.
We see Nakki go head-on with her sister Victory in an intense sibling rivalry fueled by business competition, personal secrets, and romantic jealousy.
In the show, the sisters are pitted against each other in the ruthless business world of “Pearl Sugar.”
Their father, Mr. Lutaaya, pressures Vicky to be the “tough cookie” and run the company, while Nakki is positioned as a potential disruptor.
A depiction of such characters in film shows a shift in the roles women are perceived to take on. Mr. Lutaaya, placing his trust in his daughter to run the family business, is a move seen as reshaping power, careers and possibilities.
This change may appear subtle, but its implications are significant.
Storytelling defines cultural imagination. When audiences repeatedly see women as leaders, strategists, entrepreneurs or decision-makers, it expands the boundaries of what feels credible in real life.
What this does is that it influences how societies understand capability and authority.
Just as important is what is happening behind the camera.
Women are steadily expanding their presence as producers, writers, editors and production managers within Uganda’s creative industry.
This shift matters because creative control determines which stories are prioritized and how they are framed. Case in point is Doreen Mirembe, the producer of the hit drama series, Damalie.
A certified nurse in real life was able to give the show an authentic feel of how the Ugandan medical scene operates.
When women participate in shaping narratives, the industry moves closer to reflecting the diversity of lived experience in Ugandan society.
However, progress should not be mistaken for parity. Structural barriers remain visible.
Access to financing for film and television projects continues to be uneven. Informal industry networks can still determine who gets opportunities. Technical training pipelines remain limited, particularly for women seeking to enter production-heavy roles such as cinematography or post-production.
These constraints highlight an important point, which is that representation alone is not enough.
Visibility must be accompanied by deliberate investment in skills development, production infrastructure and financing mechanisms that enable women to build sustainable careers in the industry.
There are encouraging signs that this ecosystem is beginning to evolve.
This year’s International Women’s Day’s theme, “Give to Gain,” offers an important reminder for the creative economy: progress in representation does not happen by chance, it requires consistent investment in talent development, storytelling platforms, and industry infrastructure.
MultiChoice embraced this with a spinoff theme for both their internal and external communications “We are because she is” – a testament to the contribution women give in the industry.
Investing in women’s visibility in film and television means supporting training programs like MultiChoice Talent Factory (MTF), production opportunities as on Mnet’s Pearl Magic and Pearl Magic Prime, and mentorship pipelines that enable emerging talent to transition into leadership roles within the industry, like Uganda Communications Commission Uganda Film Festival activities and engagements.
It also means recognizing that storytelling is a strategic cultural asset.
Countries that nurture strong creative industries shape domestic narratives and global perceptions.
Uganda’s creative sector is still developing, but it carries significant potential. Representation on screen can inspire, but representation behind the camera determines who controls the narrative.
For Uganda’s film and television industry, the next phase of growth will depend on whether both dimensions advance together.
Rinaldi Jamugisa is the PR and Communications Manager at MultiChoice Uganda
