Top Boyâs Jasmine Jobson: from âthe most difficult child in Westminsterâ to Netflix hit
Jasmine Jobson always knew she wanted to be an actor â she just took an irregular route to get there. At 26, the Bafta-nominated Top Boy actor is one of the most exciting new talents in the industry, scoring a starring role in the acclaimed BBC adaptation of Noughts + Crosses and acting alongside thespian favourite Ben Whishaw in the gritty 2020 thriller Surge. To hear Jobson talk about her career is to listen to someone still in amazement at her accomplishments, and for good reason. Jobson says she was branded âthe most difficult child in Westminsterâ by social services as a teenager.
âSinging, dancing, acting â I could pretty much do anything,â Jobson remembers of her early childhood, speaking from a hotel room in Cape Town, where the second series of Noughts + Crosses is currently being filmed. She started singing at the age of two â âChitty Chitty Bang Bang, all the Disney songs â you name it, I sung itâ. At four or five years old, her mother got her a Madame Butterfly CD and said: âYou really think you can sing? Try that.â Jobson laughs: âI was up at 6am singing opera in the bath.â Her parents sent her to Paddington Arts, a west London youth centre that develops young peopleâs creativity, but she had to leave once the family began struggling financially.
Jobson â whose father is Jamaican and mother is Irish and Greek Cypriot (âIâm not gonna lie, Iâve got some fire in my belly,â she says of her heritage) â was sent to live with her grandmother as a child. âI used to take the absolute mick,â she recalls. She disappeared for hours after school â âIâd go out on a Friday and come back on a Sundayâ â and was sent to a pupil referral unit. The rapper Fredo was in the year above, but she remembers most keenly what people thought of the students there: âEverybody knows theyâre all bad breeds. What it is, weâre misunderstood.â
Eventually Jobson realised the effect her behaviour was having. âI was upsetting my nan. She had to be a parent all over again.â Jobson took the unusual choice of putting herself into foster care â âthe best thing I ever didâ â and was sent to live with an experienced carer called Valerie, a tough, no-nonsense woman in Westminster with kids of her own. âFour or five years later, I was a professional actor. That was with a lot of her guidance,â she says.
Jobson describes herself as a âtypical kid who was always interested in performing artsâ â as a young child, she says, she âdreamed of having my face on billboardsâ. After getting her GCSEs, Jobson ended up at the Big House Theatre Company, where a 12-week programme teaches young care leavers and ex-prisoners independence and theatre skills. (In a stroke of providence, the poet Lemn Sissay visited with a bundle of Malorie Blackman books and gifted a copy of Noughts & Crosses to Jobson.)
Some of the people on the course didnât even know how to make beans on toast; Jobson left with a film and TV agent on the strength of her starring role in Phoenix, a play about the experiences of those in care. âI walked in there as a troubled teen, and I stepped out as a strong, independent Black female with a career,â she says, pausing to wipe away tears. âIâm getting emotional just thinking about it.â
Jobsonâs biggest challenge so far, she says diplomatically, has been needing to âstep away from certain friendship circles when realising they werenât good for meâ. She adds: âItâs hard. But, I mean, one thing that Valerie taught me is that we keep going no matter what â itâs as simple as that.â In 2019, Netflix cast her in a breakout role as the streetwise lesbian drug dealer Jaq in the newly resurrected Top Boy. Jobson saw her face plastered on billboards across London and received a Bafta nomination for best supporting actress. This year, she was named one of Forbesâ â30 under 30â in the European entertainment section.
You can count the number of Black or minority ethnic foster care kids in British film and TV on one hand, but Jobson â who idolised fellow Londoners John Boyega and Letitia Wright â thinks times are changing. âDes Hamilton is living proof,â she says, pointing to the Top Boy casting director best known for plucking diverse talent with no experience from the street. âWhen youâve got people like that within the industry, change is inevitable.â
But for those from what social services might delicately describe as âchallenging backgroundsâ, she has some words of advice: âBe prepared to have knockbacks â Iâve had more noes than Iâve had yeses,â she says, counting an unnamed Star Wars role among them. Jobson, as a rule, also doesnât do nude scenes: âItâs something that Iâm just not comfortable with,â she explains. âMy parents have to watch that â and my nan!â Being able to advocate for yourself is something sheâs keen to stress to younger people coming into the industry: âIf you feel that itâs not right for you, then donât be afraid to say no.â
What she would like to see more of, she says, is âcommunity work within the [film and TV] industryâ. She points to the number of derelict or unused community centres in the UK. âWhy donât we rent them out for the weekends and host [drama] workshops for everybody on the estate and get all the young people â even adults â to come out and join you?â she suggests. âYouâre helping the community and youâre saving lives. Not only that, youâre keeping so many young people off the streets.â She grins: âThatâs something that I might actually look into â Iâve just had an epiphany!â
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