Ireti Doyle, the award-winning Nollywood actress, is celebrating three decades of acting.
In an Instagram post on Wednesday, the 58-year-old actress shared a photo of herself alongside a short reflective note titled 30+ truths from 30 years of experience.
Every script is an invitation to understand, feel, and become. Likes are not to be memorised, they are to be lived, she wrote.
In the accompanying caption, Ireti traced her journey back to 1995 when she landed her first paid role.
My first paid acting job ever was in 1995. The role was Shade in the soap opera ‘Riddles & Hopes’ produced by one of the most prolific producers/directors to come out of Jos city, the late great Matt Dadzie, she wrote.
30 years of making magic and creating memorable characters and moments. 3 solid decades… What a ride!
Born on May 3, 1967, in Ondo state, Ireti spent part of her early years in Boston, United States, before returning to Nigeria.
She earned a diploma in Mass Communication and later obtained a degree in Theatre Arts from the University of Jos.
Ireti began her career in media as a producer and presenter, creating Oge with Iretiola, a fashion and lifestyle show that ran for a decade.
She also anchored several TV programmes including Morning Ride, Today on STV, and NIMASA This Week on Channels TV.
Her acting breakthrough came in the late 1990s with All About Ere (1998), followed by notable performances in Sitanda (2006), Across the Niger (2009), and Torn (2013).
She gained widespread recognition for her role as Dr. Elizabeth in Fifty (2015), which earned her a nomination for Best Actress in a Leading Role at the Africa Movie Academy Awards (AMAA).
She has appeared in major Nollywood films such as The Arbitration, The Wedding Party, Merry Men, Kasanova, Zena, and Something Wicked.
Recently, Ireti featured in The Black Book (2023) and played Inspector Babalola in Netflix’s To Kill a Monkey (2025).
On television, she is known for creating memorable characters in shows like Fuji House of Commotion, Tinsel, Gidi Up, Dowry, Flawsome, and The Origin: Madam Koi-Koi.
Over the course of her career, Ireti has earned several accolades, including Best Supporting Actress at the Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards (AMVCA) in 2015, and AMAA awards for Sitanda and :Across the Niger.
She was married to broadcaster and actor Patrick Doyle. The union however ended in a divorce.