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The last curtain call: A nation weeps for Alexx Ekubo

THE news did not creep in; it crashed. Like a furious harmattan wind sweeping through the market stalls of Lagos, the whisper turned into a wail on Tuesday, May 13, 2026. Alexx Ekubo, the dazzling light of Nollywood, had taken his final bow at just 40 years old.

For a man who had been silent – his last Instagram post a ghost from December 2024, a relic from a time before his world quietly unravelled – the silence was now deafening. He had slipped away after an undisclosed illness, a battle fought in the shadows that the gossip pages never captured. The *Punch* newspaper would later confirm the cruelest detail: a prolonged war with cancer.

Across the sprawling, chaotic, magnificent tapestry of Nigeria, the grief was immediate and visceral.

On Instagram, the reverence was biblical. One fan posted a picture of the late actor with a stark warning from Matthew 25: *“While the bridegroom tarried, they all slumbered and slept… Behold, the Bridegroom cometh.”* It was a chilling reminder that death, like a thief in the night, had robbed them of their matinee idol.

But it was on X (formerly Twitter) that the raw, unfiltered heart of a shattered fandom poured out.

**“Is this some late April Fool joke?”** begged a user named @Mr. Rekindled of AFC, refusing to accept the reality. **“God, what kind of news is this?”**

The tributes were a kaleidoscope of grief, philosophy, and memory. @perpetua Ebubech wrote a eulogy that cut to the bone of existential dread: **“Rest well, Alex. I am done pressurising myself and being ungrateful. Being alive is enough. Aaaaaah, Alex.”**

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In that single “Aaaaaah,” she captured the scream of a generation that realized fame and fortune are but costumes worn over a fragile, finite soul.

Another fan, @sheismirah_bakr, offered a poignant prayer that trended for hours: **“May we leave behind kindness, love, and good memories. May we be celebrated while we are alive, not only mourned when we are gone.”**

The pain was not just in Nigeria. From the diaspora in the US to the streets of Accra, the grief was a shared inheritance. @bbelleamieeee recalled his electric chemistry with legends: **“I loved him in *Keeping My Man* with Ramsey and Ini. Sad news… rest easy, Alex.”** A user named @nyarkowai23 simply stared at his photograph and sighed, **“Aww, fine boy. May his soul rest in peace.”**

Then came the sound of glass breaking. **“What’s wrong with Nollywood?”** demanded @DOG3tt, his frustration echoing a nation’s sorrow. **“Why is everyone dying young?”**

As the fans wept in the digital town square, the royalty of Nollywood emerged to carry his casket with their words.

**Richard Mofe-Damijo (RMD)**, the elder statesman, wrote a eulogy that sounded like a Shakespearean soliloquy: *“Life is not only fickle, it can also feel unreal. Even as I type this, I still struggle to fully process it… You came, you saw, and you conquered. Sleep well, our dear Alex.”*

**Funke Akindele**, **Kate Henshaw**, and **Mercy Johnson**—the goddesses of the screen—posted broken heart emojis, their usual eloquence lost to shock. **Chinedu Ikedieze** (Aki) could only muster two words that said everything: *“Jesus, how?”*

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Even outside the silver screen, the grief was palpable. Human rights activist **Omoyele Sowore** paused politics to pay homage, remembering a chance encounter at 30,000 feet. *“I never met him personally,”* Sowore wrote, *“but I still cannot forget a movie of his I watched on an Emirates flight from New York to Dubai… He was a rare talent whose presence lit up the screen effortlessly.”*

They remembered the *Bling Lagosians*. They remembered *Weekend Getaway*. They remembered the dazzling fashion, the million-watt smile, and the effortless charm that made him the blueprint for the modern Nollywood heartthrob.

But beneath the glitz, there was a haunting truth. Alexx had been away. His prolonged absence from the public eye, the radio silence after the painful collapse of his engagement to US-based model Fancy Acholonu, had been a warning. He was fighting a battle no costume could disguise.

As midnight fell over Lagos, the cries of the fans merged into a single, resonant requiem. **“Omoh,”** wrote @SAMPSOLO, putting the final period on the day’s tragedy. **“Sometimes when I hear such news, I just sit down and think about life. Everything we’re struggling for can just end in one moment. It’s really scary.”**

The curtain has fallen. The projector has clicked off. But for the millions who watched him live, Alexx Ekubo remains a permanent fixture in the cinema of their hearts. A brief, beautiful, blazing star who reminded a chaotic world that being alive is, indeed, enough.

By SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

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