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Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Presenting the Nollywood Actor - Ejike Asiegbu


Ex-chairman of the Actors Guild of Nigeria (AGN), Ejike Asiegbu, is well-known in Nigeria’s film industry, but most Nigerians don’t know that the talented actor is gradually positioning himself to try his hands in the murky waters of Nigerian politics. He’s a Theatre Arts graduate and currently the Special Assistant to the Abia State Governor, Theodore Orji on entertainment. He traces his acting career to his role in Chinua Achebe’s tragedy Things Fall Apart as a warrior. In this exclusive interview, he reflects on his acting career, the raging feud in AGN, the scourge of piracy and censorship, his political ambition and his family.

Excerpts:

You have not been featuring in movies lately . Are you taking a break or you have gone into another line of biz?

I am a stakeholder in Nollywood and a filmmaker, first and foremost. Apart from movies, there are other things I do. I am a media consultant and a trader also.

You have a stable home contrary to the general perception about actors. How did you achieve this and how have you been able to sustain it?

It’s hard work and understanding . I’m happily married and blessed with four lovely children. I have a girl and three boys, so what else can I say? It’s love and understanding . It’s about marrying somebody who is your wife and not marrying another person’s wife. It’s marrying somebody who you desire to marry.

Before I found my wife, I asked God for a woman that would tolerate me, a woman I would love and who would love me equally so that both of us could make a home. Our marriage is now 15 or 16 years and we are still counting. I thank God for that. If you’re not faithful to your wife and there is no understanding between you , it’s unfortunate. I thank God , because we have been growing and we have many more years to celebrate and we will continue to be there, because I married a woman who loves me and who I love too. I respect her and she also respects me. So, there is love and understanding in my home.

I understand you featured in Things Fall Apart. What role did you play?

I was a member of the cast of Things Fall Apart until I had to go for my exams. I played the role of a village warrior.

Nowadays, Nollywood seems to be allowing nudity in movies. Is it a marketing strategy of producers ? What’s it all about?

Well, every writer has poetic license . I have said severally that our writers need more training. A few are very good but we also have a lot who are just writing for writing sake and who believe that nudity is the only thing that can sell a movie. Such movies don’t impress me because I am trained. They should begin to look at social issues and children’s stories that can educate and make society a better place. Nollywood should focus on political and other social themes and not only romance.

I have heard them say on several occasions that nudity is what the people want. But for me it’s funny. Viewers cannot want that always. This doesn’t mean Nollywood lacks great writers, producers, directors whose works speak volumes. Things are getting better now. I know the industry is growing and we can be better.

What would you say of Nollywood in the next five years?

Five years is just like tomorrow. We are still crawling. If you say 10 to 15 years, you would have set the right timeframe within which to make a projection. So far, I must commend efforts of my peers in the industry . We all know that we fund ourselves and we are lucky to get funding . A lot of independent minded professionals have defied the odds and are making movies on CDs and people appreciate these movies, but at considerable loss eventually due to piracy.

We must appreciate the likes of Ben Bruce who have done so much through his valuable Silverbird Cinemas. Three or four movie producers from Europe are trying to set up cinemas in the country too. That’s the profitable venue to launch movies . If you shoot a movie, don’t release it on CDs, go to the cinemas and promote it. While promoting it, people will hear about it and they will watch it in the theatres and if it is good, they would want to keep a copy by the time you release it on CDs.
Government is key to producing an enabling environment ultimately. It’s not as if the laws are not there.
There are laws but who obeys them?

Why hasn’t government taken effective measures against piracy?

I don’t want to indict the government, but a better process could have been adopted in checking piracy. I’m aware that in Lagos, for example, before you open a shop, you must pay the Internal Revenue Service for the space. So, who are pirates? There are rules and regulations to checkmate them but do government officials help us?

What some of them are willing to do is just to collect their money and allow them to go. So, a lot needs to be done to protect the interests of filmmakers . Other professionals have problems too , but let’s hope that the N200million government recently gave to Nollywood will be managed by the right people who will disburse it to real filmmakers and not quacks .

Why are some of you venturing into politics? We’ve heard of Kanayo .O. Kanayo, Okey Bakassi, and RMD who have declared interest in politics.

It’s wrong for you to ask why any Nigerian adult , least of all actors, have ventured into politics , because they are Nigerians. We are Nigerians and you as an individual have a political party you admire. So, we are all politicians. Everybody or most Nigerians prefer one political party to the other. They either like a particular leader or a particular person who is in a particular political party or they want to protect them. It happens all over the world.

For instance Arnold Schwarzenegger was an actor and ex-governor of California and late US Ex-president Ronald Reagan was an actor. RMD was a special adviser to Delta state government and now a commissioner. Okey Bakassi and I are special advisers on entertainment to Governor T.A Orji of Abia state. Of course Kanayo .O. Kanayo is eligible to contest any government office. So, there is nothing new. Every qualified Nigerian is entitled to contest one position or the other. So, politics is not a special thing for a few people.

However, you know, politics has to start from your constituency and not campaigning in Lagos without going home. Some people stay in Lagos and campaign and say they are running for a seat in the Federal House of Representatives. Things don’t work that way. Go to your constituency and test your popularity. You need acceptance from your people that you have the capacity to represent them.

Do you see yourself joining the fray for elective positions in the nearest future?

Certainly. By the grace of God in 2015, I will . You know I am already serving my state government and whatever we can do to provide good service to the people we shall do, because that’s what matters in governance.

Tell us your exciting moments in acting

I don’t have “best times”. I’m a product of forward ever and backward never. I was trained by Ola Rotimi. I want to measure success by my popularity. So, to that extent, I will say, I am favored because I am recognized not just as an actor but also as a leader and someone that has impacted positively not just the Actors Guild of Nigeria but the entertainment industry as a whole. I’m a social commentator, a comrade and a man of many parts. I’m an actor, a director, producer, a member of civil society and a politician.

How do you relax?

I relax with my family from time to time. I also relax by going out to watch football and relating with friends. Sometimes, I travel a lot with my family. Sometimes, I go out clubbing with my wife.

That means you are close to your kids?

Oh! Very close, except I’m not always around, but even if I travel, I speak with them every day.

What would you do if your libido is weak to keep your wife from going out with other men?

There are certain things you don’t pray for. There are certain things you don’t need answers to and there are things that no man prays for. First, my libido is not weak. My wife can tell you that I’m quite virile even at my age. On what I will do if I’m in such state, I don’t know, because it is only when you have it that you want to do something. I have never had it. I’m a firebrand.

Sometimes, it happens. It’s not every time a woman wants to make love and the same goes for men who are workaholics. If you want to be a successful man, you have to work hard because success is also determined by how hardworking you have been. Sometimes, you may not be in the mood. As a human being you may also be tired. In such situations, you just need to relax, have enough sleep because under that condition you cannot do anything. Wives don’t understand this always. They will tell you that there’s a problem or suspect that you must have satisfied yourself outside. This is always their thinking but it’s wrong.

Women think every time we are out to meet friends in a restaurant, there must be “the other woman” there. We don’t have such time. We discuss business then. Men also want to relate with friends to talk about life, issues and other things. The same thing applies to career women . They work so hard and need time to unwind. So, sometimes, sex or anything that borders on it is not what they want. They need relaxation. At such times , go to cinemas, clubs and always remember the nice times you’ve had together . We need some time off work, to take a break and do some check-ups. Some have died and some have lost so much because they don’t rest.

What do you mean by “women want to ruin men”?

Yes, in the sense that if they have their way, they don’t want their man to have money in their pockets, because they feel that once you have money, you will spend it on “others”. So, they would ask “Where are you going ?” From here to that place, how much does it cost?” They would want to give you money for fuel. They want to decide who you relate with and in fact if you go there you must not drink. If you must drink, it’s only you that will drink.

Your friends will have to fend for themselves. Invariably, they don’t know men have a way of living. Today you buy for your friends and tomorrow, they will buy for you. Our world is quite different, because even the rich also cry, not because they are not talking. It’s not because they drive Hummer Jeeps and all the big cars in this world. Some of them don’t have money to put fuel in their cars. There are challenges like that.

But with time, he knows that dry bones can rise again. Things can happen and a man you think doesn’t have anything today can become a millionaire tomorrow. So, that’s life . There are ups and downs but how well we manage it, is what matters. We pray that God will give every man his real wife who will understand, tolerate and help him to build a home. Women need to be tolerant and patient with their men.

They should not think because a man does not have a car today, he cannot have it tomorrow. If a man is not as big as his classmates today, it doesn’t mean he cannot be bigger than them tomorrow. So, everybody has his own time. It’s only God who makes things happen for everybody.

If you quarrel with your wife, how long does it take you to resolve it ?

I make sure it doesn’t exceed 24 hours before we settle it. After discussing with maturity, we make hot love. And that’s the way to make a genuine settlement. A man should not be tired of saying sorry if he is wrong, even though I don’t subscribe to “sorry my wife ” always, because as you are saying sorry women tend to take advantage of that unnecessarily. Women are ready to say “that was how you said sorry the other day, you said it in 1984, you said it two weeks ago”.

They even go as far as writing in their diary, how many times you said sorry. And if you don’t say sorry again, they say you are so “hardened and stubborn”. They will say your friends have taught you “not to say sorry to your wife”. In all, I tell you, it’s always good not to allow your quarrel to spill to the next day . Otherwise your ego will come in and two, three days to one week, it will take both your parents to settle it. The woman should not be tired of saying sorry either. My take on this , is that I am blessed and I thank God that my wife and I are matured adults.

Friday, August 24, 2012

Presenting Kate Henshaw-Nuttal of Nollywood


Henshaw-Nuttall was born in Cross River State, Nigeria, the oldest of four children. After completing her primary and secondary school in Lagos and Calabar, she spent one year at the University of Calabar reading remedial studies, and then majored in Medical Microbiology at the School of Medical Lab Science, LUTH (Lagos University Teaching Hospital) in Lagos. Henshaw-Nuttall worked at the Bauchi State General hospital. In 1993 Henshaw-Nuttall auditioned for an acting job in the movie When the Sun Sets and was handed the role. This was her first appearance in a major Nollywood movie. Henshaw-Nuttall has starred in over 40 Nollywood movies. In 2008 she won the African Movie Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role for the film Stronger than Pain. She is presently "The Face of Onga"





Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Presenting Ajibola Dabo of Nollywood


Jibola Dabo actor, writer and director hails from the beautiful town of Owo in Ondo State. A holder of a Master degree in Mass Media from the Columbia State University, United States,  He is also a holder of a first degree in Fine Arts and majored  in graphics.



Recently you won the best actor award at the  Zuma film festival, were you expecting it?
Not at all.  I didn’t even know I was nominated. In fact, I was on my way to Lagos from Ibadan when I received a telephone call informing me that I am expected in Abuja and I wondered why?
Because I’m a producer, my initial thought was they were calling me up for a job or something else. But when the voice insisted that it was important I decided to travel to Abuja. I wondered why some people think they could just call me and tell me to start coming to Abuja, without telling me why.
The suspense was made worse when the caller told me that “ this is something that has to do with a lifetime achievement, I wish you’ll make it. Get to Nicon  Luxury Hotel and your expenses will be reimbursed and all that. .” I had to turn back because I’d already left home. It never crossed my mind for once that I was up for an award. To compound my situation, I didn’t have enough funds to embark on the trip. It was a total drama because I had  fifteen thousand Naira on me and I had even bought fuel from it and a ticket was about nineteen thousand naira. Somehow I got to Abuja late and I had to drive straight to the event centre and by this time, the function had begun. I was shocked when I was called and the award was handed over to me by the French Ambassador to Nigeria. The movies screened were not only Nigerian movies as South Africa, Germany and Nigeria were equally represented. I was elated.

What ran through your mind the moment you were called up for the award?
I cannot really describe the feeling.  I can only compare it to my life on stage whenever I finish a performance and people begin to applaud. The euphoria is not explainable.

Was that your first major award?
In Nigeria, yes. I have received a fellowship award for choreography and I have also received what we call hall wall awards in the theatre, all in the US, but in Nigeria, this is the biggest so far.

How credible is the Zuma festival award?
With due respect to all other awards, the Zuma award is one of the very few awards that you cannot influence. I questioned them on the reason they waited so late  to inform me about the award and I was told that the decision was reached the morning of that day I was called. Someone summed it up in a text, she sent saying ‘this is a true measure of quality’ because it is a very different and credible award.

When did you join Nollywood?
I started off with TV soaps when I returned in 2003 and I joined Nollywood in 2006. Before then, I was on stage for KOJA and the Commonwealth celebration. The theme of the play was Toy Soldier, Boy Soldier. That was the first thing I did when I came back.

For those who may not know, what were you doing before you departed the shores of this country?
Acting and dancing is what I have been doing on TV since the seventies.

Do you dance?
I was the director of the black heritage. We did the forty man dance at Sambo that I took around the world.

You still dance?
I still dance . . .

What sparked up your interest in art?
Sincerely I wouldn’t know because I would not say that I got this or that from anyone  in my family
I just grew up and found myself in the acting profession. As a child and long before I was of school age, my big sister and my brothers will cast me whenever they returned home from school as part of their Biblical plays. So naturally when I started school I became part of the school’s drama group. I remembered vividly one of the major plays that I acted in when I was in primary four.
I played the role of Samson and till date, most of my schoolmates (in primary school) still call me Samson.
I also played the role of  the traditional chief priest of my town, Owo.  That is also remarkable for me . . .

Were you born with a silver spoon?
No.

What was life like as a child?
Rough, very rough. Imagine a situation where six children are left behind to a mother who never saw the four walls of a school and had to cater for her children.

Did you hawk to help out?
 Of course! I hawked all manners of wares and products. I hawked kerosene and I remember there was a song my siblings and I used to sing whenever we were hawking kerosene.  The song went thus ‘Keroseneeeeeee!!! gbanjo epo re o komeji, elepo n’re le o ema daroo, toba diwoyi ola, arokun epo oyinbo’. ( Buy cheap kerosene for two shillings . . . don’t wait till tomorrow)I also hawked Orii (local balm).
 I did all sorts of menial jobs to augment the little my mother could.

How were you able to get quality education and even travel abroad?
 I give thanks to God Almighty first and to my mother. My late mother was a wonderful woman. She inspired and made it clear to us that she was subservient to her brothers because she lacked proper education. I managed to get quality education, though I kept being sent off because of school fees. I repeated a class because of four shillings.  I went to farm with my mother and by the time I got back to school with the money, I lost a whole term. So I stayed away and returned the following year to continue school. Al of these made me a very bitter and stubborn child. I resented so many things in the society and I feared I’ll end up in jail. I was always fighting with the police and with people because I hate cheating and everything like that.  But what helped me in life was because I had uncles who considered education as important and they gave me reasons to say I want to be better than you. I was looked down on by a very brilliant uncle. He was versatile in the use of the English language and he could pick holes in everything you say. When I said I was going to study the arts, he refused to help out because he considered the subject as course for low lives. He preferred I read law or medicine.

How?
You know when you want something, you long for it, you crave for it and that was what happened in my case. I did all sorts of things to survive and nobody in my family can say I did this for you or that a dime of his paid my fees.

As a polygamist, how many wives were your father married to?
 My dad had four wives and my mother was the first. But I didn’t grow up with them. I lived with different uncles and aunties. I never had the opportunity of living with my family, so I didn’t miss much. ‘

What are some of the things you learnt from your folks that may have influenced the way you make decisions in life?

Learning is a lifetime process. My mum used to tell me that no matter how beautiful a woman is, if she is married, never go near her. I held onto that for so long and it has become a part of me. She also taught me to be honest at all times.  She would tell me that if you tell one lie, you will need many more to cover up for that one lie.

On a more personal note, what really happened between you and Ayo Mogaji?
I don’t want to talk about Ayo Mogaji. She is in her husband’s house but still my very good friend. She is also the mother of my child and that suits me fine.

Are you planning to remarry?
Yes . . .

How soon?
Well very soon.

May we know the lucky woman?
No she is a private person.

What attracts you to a woman?
I am someone who sees beauty differently.  I don’t go for the artificial beauty. I love intelligent women. I love women who could challenge me intellectually.

Considering your experiences home and abroad, what do you think of the motion picture industry in Nigeria today?
We have made tremendous growth and progress but we are not there yet.

So what do we do to get there?
We will get there because the mediocre are going to fall by the way side. We have some directors producing world class movies.  It is a matter of time for things to be all right.

What if you were offered, a political appointment will you accept it?
I’m not a politician. I’d probably shoot myself on the foot because I’m not diplomatic. Political appointment is not for me. I will not be able to play the politicking that is required.

Is your beard a signature?
I shave it sometimes, but for a long while, it has been like this. If I cut it down now, my fans may protest, so I leave it.

How do you handle advances from female fans?
I don’t like women.  I love women. I am a flirt.  People misunderstand that when I say it, I love to flirt but that is if you understand what flirting means.

What does it mean to flirt?
It means interacting with the opposite sex or person in a manner that would gladden their heart. I could flirt with an old woman for instance. You know as an artiste my obligation is to make the people happy and so you need to flirt with people to do that. It is part of the job. When I’m on set, I flirt mostly with the assistants because they are looked down upon.

Why are you always in white or is it a ritual?
It is not.  I have been wearing no other colour than white in the last fifteen years. Except I‘m on set, you will not see me in something else but white. I  feel very comfortable in white and it has nothing to do with ritual.

How often do you see your children?
I’m in constant touch with my children. Some of them are married and the rest area also doing fine.

And how many grandchildren do you have? 
I have six grandchildren and they are doing well too.

How does it feel being a granddaddy?
It feels good and it also reminds that one is not getting any younger.  It gives you an additional sense of responsibility.  It is a blessing too and I am happy.



Dedicated to the memory of Teslim Olamilekan Suleiman (1992 - 2005) [Click Image to read about him]