Category: Entertainment

  • AfricaMagic calls for auditions

    AfricaMagic calls for auditions

    As it prepares to stage the seventh edition of its TV series, Tinsel and film feature initiative, AfricaMagic Original Films, AfricaMagic is has now announced auditions for new TV and film stars.

    According to the management, this is part of its contribution to the development of local productions of film and TV initiatives in Nigeria.

    The auditions, according to information, are scheduled to hold simultaneously on Thursday and Friday May 1 and 2 from 7a.m. to 5p.m. at different locations across the country as well as neighbouring countries, including Ghana.

    According to the organisers, venues of the auditions include Protea Hotel, SS Lounge, Victoria Island, both in Lagos, and the Theatre Arts Department Hall, University of Ibadan.

    The auditions, according to a release, seek to provide the opportunity for talented Nigerians to live their dreams of starring in the popular soap opera or in an AfricaMagic movie, while launching their acting careers to a continental audience. It is open to male and female.

    The Regional Director, Wangi Mba-Uzoukwu, said: “AfricaMagic is always excited to be a part of the fast- growing African film and television industry. We are equally excited at the opportunity to create pure African contents. But more importantly, we have the chance to continue to tell the African story on a continent wide platform.”

  • Stephanie Linus sends love note to hubby

    Stephanie Linus sends love note to hubby

    It was exactly two years on Monday, April 21, when Nollywood star, Stephanie Okereke-Linus played host to a number of dignitaries, including President Goodluck Jonathan, in Paris, France, as she bade goodbye to spinsterhood.

    In commemoration of the second anniversary of her wedding to Linus Idahosa, a businessman, the Nollywood screen diva took to the social media and sent a kind of billet-doux to her loving husband.

    “My soulmate- we are going to be looking into each other’s eyes for a long time. Kiss Tease!” she said.

    For the actress, her image soared higher in the industry, following the success of her soar-away movie, Through the Glass, which was written, directed and produced by her in 2008.

    Six years after, the tall and beautiful actress has produced yet another phenomenal movie, Dry, which is yet to be released. The movie, which centres on the issue of rape, has been generating a lot of buzz since she released the unofficial trailer last year in the heat of the ‘Child Not Bride’ debate.

    She is one of the few Nollywood stars that have signed some brand endorsements.

  • AFRIFF: Organisers seek entries

    AFRIFF: Organisers seek entries

    The Africa International Film Festival (AFRIFF) has called on Nollywood producers and directors to enter their movies for its fourth awards ceremony scheduled to hold between November 9 and 16 at Tinapa, Calabar, Cross River State.

    In a statement, the organisers said eligible films must have been produced after January 1, 2013 and preference would be given to films that are yet to be screened globally or in Africa.

    The categories for entry include: Best Feature Film, Best Authentic Nigerian Feature, Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Director, Best Screenplay, Best Documentary, Best Short Film, Best Student Short, Best Animation, Jury Special Prize for Outstanding Film as well as Audience Choice with cash prizes, ranging from $3000 $6000.

    AFRIFF is a platform that seeks to give expression to the African cinema by recognizing and rewarding excellence in the industry.

    According to the organisers, deadline for submission of entries in the short film category ends on June 13, while that of the feature length films end on June 30. “All entries will be viewed by the selection committee. The festival will make no cuts or changes. Festival selections will be announced in September, 2013.

    All entrants will be notified by email. The festival jury and special guests will present awards to films selected as best in their categories at the festival awards ceremony in November,” the statement said.

  • Lere Paimo plans to build drama school

    Lere Paimo plans to build drama school

    Veteran Yoruba actor, Lere Paimo, is a household name. He is one of the prides of Nollywood, having spent over five decades plying his trade at home and abroad.

    However, he recently opened up on his heart desire. He revealed during one of the editions of the MTN game show, Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, that he would like to set up a theatre school, as a legacy for the coming generation of actors in Nigeria.

    The actor, who had been assisted by Gloria Young and Babatunde Oni in the hot seat, won the sum of N1million during the show.

    The actress and her partner had decided to walk away after the 11th question, when they were not sure of the answer, even with the help of lifelines.

    Obviously excited, the actor said: “I am happy, but would have loved to have more, so that I can leave a legacy behind. I would not want to leave without doing something for the young ones who are aspiring to be actors in the future.”

    The Oyo State-born legend has been acting for more than 50 years. An actor, producer, director, chanter and singer, he came into the limelight when he produced Ogbori Elemoso, after having starred in many films. He made the transition from the stage to screen when the contemporary film regime started especially in the 90s, and has remained active on the scene.

  • Auditions for Star The Winner Is kick off

    Auditions for Star The Winner Is kick off

    The first season of Africa’s first-ever TV music and game show, Star The Winner Is, has begun with an exciting first stage of auditions.

    Organisers of the show have announced that the ancient city of Benin will play host to thousands of hopefuls, who are set to bring their all for a life-time opportunity to slug it out on the first-of-its-kind show.

    Interested applicants in Benin and its environs will converge on Constantial Hotel, Benin on Tuesday April 29, a development that is intended to spark up a region-wide tour spanning five cities in Nigeria.

    “We already have thousands of registered Nigerians ready for the auditions and we can’t wait to begin the first step to finding the winner of the maiden edition of this life-changing show,” said Tokunbo Adodo, Marketing Manager Star, Goldberg and Export.

    He further said: “The response we have received so far has been overwhelming. Nigerians are about the most talented vocalists in the continent and we are certain that Star The Winner Is will provide yet another solid platform to re-emphasize this.”

    According to the organisers, Star the Winner Is, a music talent game show, delivers an unbeatable combination of competitive singing duels, instant money, dramatic decisions, a grand prize of 10million naira and a brand new car.

    The show has an unusual feature of 101 in-studio panel of music enthusiasts and specialists, judging finalists who emerge from the final auditions.

    The auditions, which are open to soloists with outstanding vocal talents, will also hold in other regional locations, including Enugu on May 1, Port Harcourt on May 3, Abuja on May 5, and Lagos on May 7 and 8.

  • I still wished Ayinde Barrister would walk in and tell he wasn’t dead – Late  Fuji icon’s bosom friend Adisa Osiefa

    I still wished Ayinde Barrister would walk in and tell he wasn’t dead – Late Fuji icon’s bosom friend Adisa Osiefa

    If the topic of discussion is about the Lagos social circle, few men would have their hands raised before Lagos hotelier and petroleum dealer, Otunba Adisa Osiefa.

    A close associate of the late fuji music maestro, Sikiru Ayinde Barrister, Otunba Osiefa cut his teeth in the Lagos social circle at a period when most of his contemporaries were still grappling with how to make a living. “I sew my first agbada at 21,” he told The Nation in an exclusive interview.

    Together with a few other friends, Osiefa bestrode the social circles in Lagos, and indeed the South West, like a Colossus, churning up chieftaincy titles in several major towns. While his close and longtime relationship with Sikiru Barrister saw the musician dedicate almost a whole album to Osiefa, he earned a mention from almost all the major musicians in the land.

    Indeed, young Osiefa thrust himself into the bubbling Lagos life of the early 60s straight out of secondary school, at an age when most of his contemporaries were still mostly tied to their parents’ apron strings.

    However, he was almost consumed by the ‘enjoyment’ until he decided to proceed to the UK to further his studies in the early 60s.

    “I attended both Ahmadiya Secondary in Lagos and Epe Grammar School. But after my secondary education, I started work at the Federal Ministry of Lagos Affairs. In those days, Alhaji Shehu Musa Yar’Adua, the father of late President Yar’Adua, was the minister. I spent about one year before crossing over to Barclays Bank. It was from there that I travelled to the UK.”

    According to Osiefa, his travelling to the UK at the time was borne out of foresight. With his eyes fixed on a better and secured future, young Osiefa decided that a trip to the UK at the time would avail him the opportunity to build a career, which he believed might be denied him if he remained in the country.

    “My travelling to the UK at the time was as a result of foresight. I was in the Savings Department with some of my friends. Let me tell you this: about eight of us, all young men at the time, left the bank to seek better future elsewhere because we knew that without a post-secondary school certificate, you might end up without anything in life.”

    But if the Epe, Lagos State-born Osiefa had anticipated a roller coaster ride into the UK, he soon realised how wrong he had miscalculated soon after stepping his feet into the Queen’s land. Talking about his experience, Osiefa confessed that his entry into the UK was rough right from the beginning because he entered the country without a visa.

    “My going to the UK could not have been rosy, because I entered the country without a visa. So you see, I went the wrong way. I sought for a visa, but I didn’t get it.”

    Fearing that he might end up a failure if he continued with his lifestyle of going to parties, a lifestyle he was gradually being unwittingly dragged into, the young Osiefa decided to take the plunge and make the trip to the UK without a visa.

    “Let me make this confession, I was not doing any serious studying in the first two years after I left secondary school to enable me get my A/Level certificate and to enable me enter one of the few universities in the country. So I had wasted those two years going to parties and other stuff.

    “But I knew that if I travelled to the UK, I might regain those two years that I had lost. I was also desirous of a better education. It was my going round making enquiries that somebody told me that I could go to the Irish Embassy. I went there, and I was given a note that I didn’t need a visa to enter the UK as a citizen of the Commonwealth.”

    Armed with the note, he left Nigeria on April 1, 1964, and landed at the famous Heathrow Airport. But he was soon confronted with another dilemma, because he could not enter England. So he went into Dublin, from where he connected a ferry that took him to Liverpool.

    “After we arrived at the Heathrow Airport, I could not enter into England. So I had to wait for my connecting flight to Dublin. It was from there that I took a ferry to Liverpool. I remember very well that night was said to be the coldest for more than 40 years. Fortunately, I got to Liverpool and found out that nobody was showing any visa. So I schooled in both Liverpool and Manchester. That is probably the reason why I am in love with Manchester United Football Club.”

    But despite completing his studies in the UK and having ‘regained’ the two years he had lost to partying in Lagos, Osiefa still found it hard to drop his already imbibed lifestyle, as he soon found out that England was also a virile ground for partying.

    “I think it was something that is inborn,” he said, adding: “I loved social life right from my secondary school. I loved anything that had to do with fashion. I remember, there was a particular style of shirt called ‘seven brothers’. I would buy shoes and other stuff that were fashionable. But immediately I started work in the bank, I started attending parties. I am talking about when I was about 20 years old. We would attend parties where musicians like I.K Dairo and Roy Chicago performed.

    “And you know what? Lagos of those days was filled with young juju musicians. There was no Sunny Ade or Ebenezer Obey. So as young as I was then, the social life was already part of me. Though the musician would not know us, but we attended the party to enjoy ourselves. We also held indoor parties in the UK. So it was like home away from home.”

    It was, however, not all about partying and enjoyment for him. His almost 10 years away from home also denied him the natural comfort that motherland provides. And despite having his wife, who went to join him shortly after he left, around, the young man still suffered some fits of loneliness.

    For him, the antidote in such moments of loneliness were the photos of families and friends. “After I got to the UK, there were moments that loneliness would get to me such that I would shed tears. But in such moments, I would gaze at the photos of family members and friends that I kept with me. Those photos really kept me going.

    “Secondly, I got a job at Rochdale, which is about 14 miles from Manchester. It was a shift job, which meant that I had to leave home about 4am. Imagine what one would go through in the winter. You don’t get to meet your Nigerian friends until weekends, when you meet at the fish market. It was even worse in the winter. So it was really tough. It also made us very eager to return home. You get to hear of stories of some colleagues who returned home and had secured good jobs. Those were years when the country was still very good.”

    It didn’t take him long to going on his return to the country in 1973. Having secured a good and more befitting job, it only took the bubbling and recharged young man a little time to pick up the crumbs of his social life from where he left it before his trip to the UK, but now on a more grandeur note because he had now acquired a bigger status.

    Before leaving the UK, Osiefa had a plan to work in a paid employment for only 10 years before setting up his own company. And so when the time came, he quit his job as Western Area Manager at Flour Mills Nigeria Plc.

    However, his foray into the petroleum business was more of providence than his own decision. “When I left the Flour Mills, I found out that most of my colleagues were going into the bakery business. But I never really liked the idea. I had a neighbour who advised that I go into oil business. I think the guy believed that I was kind of rich because I had about six cars at the time.

    “But I didn’t know it was easy to start the business, so I asked him how to go about it. I took his advice, and as God had it, I was travelling to Cotonou one day when I decided to acquire a piece of land for the petrol station along the Badagry Expressway. So starting the business was really not my own idea.”

    From that point, he went further to expand his business fronts when he ventured into the hospitality business in 1985.

    Speaking on the Lagos social scene of the period, Osiefa said: “You cannot compare the Lagos of those days to the present day Lagos. Our weekends started on Friday immediately after work, and continued until Sunday evening. You moved from one party to the other without any fear. It was a period when you had young musicians everywhere.

    “The likes of Ayinde Bakare, Tunde Nightingale and other young juju musicians were the popular musicians of the period. There might be five or six musicians in a particular area, and you simply moved round because it was safe for you. It was a beautiful period for young men and women. The risk is too big for any young man to go out to parties now. Life was completely different.”

    Though his long time favourite musician was Sunny Ade, but Osiefa drifted closer to then burgeoning Sikiru Ayinde Barrister soon after he returned to the country. “You know I told you that my favourite musician was KSA. But after I returned to the country, I got attracted to Barrister through one lady friend. I remember that shortly after I went to Mecca for the hajj in 1979, Barrister waxed an album in which he sang about Mecca. I loved the album, and gradually I started attending his party.”

    Once the two soul mates found each other, they remained stuck as bosom friends till Barrister breathed his last. Starting from 1984, Barrister waxed several albums in honour of his friend. Speaking about his late friend, Osiefa said: “Barrister was a very appreciative person. He didn’t forget any good or favour that you did to him. In those days, there were not many professionals that followed fuji music. So we became very close because I dragged all my professional friends to his circle. We became close family friends. His wife once stayed with us for about three months. We received most of the traditional titles that I have together, same day. So we were very close”.

    Though it is now more than two years since the late musician died, Osiefa is yet to fully absorb the impact, hoping that his bosom friend would walk in through the door any time. “I cannot really believe that Barrister is dead. We had all thought that he would soon come back from the trip, because he was already recovering, and was only waiting for full recovery. As a matter of fact, the day he died, I was to attend a party of the burial ceremony of one of our mutual friends. Suddenly, a call came in from England to inform me that my friend had died. I didn’t believe it, because it was like Barrister can never die. He was too good and intelligent to die. Even now, I still wished he would walk in and tell me that he was not dead.

    “He was full of knowledge. Let me tell you one story. In 1984, when we were being honoured in Ilobu with chieftaincy titles, we were lodged in Osogbo for weeks. As we got talking, we got to the issue of one of my friends whom I helped, but later betrayed the trust. Barrister listened to all the discussions, and when he climbed the stage, he used what he heard to compose one of his most beautiful songs. He was simply too intelligent.”

  • Auditions hold for Next Tinsel Star

    AfricaMagic, is throwing its doors open as it auditions for Africa’s next brightest TV and Film stars!

    As part of its contribution to the development of local productions of film and TV initiatives in Nigeria, AfricaMagic is once again calling on aspiring actors and actresses in the country to audition for various roles in the popular multi-camera soap opera, Tinsel and its first ever film feature initiative, AfricaMagic Original Films.

    The auditions are scheduled to hold simultaneously on Thursday 1st and Friday 2nd May 2014, from 7am to 5pm at different locations across the country and neighboring country, Ghana. Venues include; Lagos – Protea Hotel Leadway (Beside Mobil Filling Station), 1 Mogambo Close, Maryland Estate, Ikeja. The SS Lounge, 7 Sapara Williams Close, Off Idowu Martins Street, Victoria Island. Other Venues include; Ibadan, Theatre Arts Department Hall, University of Ibadan and Ghana.

    The audition seeks to provide the opportunity for talented Nigerians to live their dreams of starring in the popular soap opera or in an AfricaMagic produced movie, launch their acting careers to a continental audience and is open to male, female; young and old. To audition, interested persons are required to come along with; three (3) copies of an individual five-by-seven (5×7) coloured, non-photo shopped studio-shot portrait photograph.

    Since its debut to a continental audience in 2008, Tinsel, a thirty minutes series, has gone on to win the hearts of hundreds of DStv viewers both in the country and on the continent, becoming a daily show with a widely watched omnibus on Sundays on AfricaMagic Entertainment, Channel 151. Currently in its sixth season, Tinsel has become a must watch for millions of DStv audiences on the African continent; a development that prompted the AfricaMagic brand to air previous seasons of the show on some of the other AfricaMagic channels and Silverbird TV to the delight of many television viewers. Tinsel is shot on location in Nigeria and is part of AfricaMagic’s local investment drive dedicated to developing the television industry in the Africa.

    In the wake of AfricaMagic’s many successes and its continued efforts in building and supporting the thriving African film industry, AfricaMagic in September 2013 launched its ever feature films platform, AfricaMagic Original Films which debuted on AfricaMagic Entertainment, Channel 151. With a fast growing film library, AfricaMagic Original Films has produced over 60 movies in the first phase of this film initiative and on its way to the second, prompting these auditions, to seek potential film stars and give opportunities to a wide range of film enthusiasts.

    Speaking on the plan to launch widely spread auditions for two of the brand’s biggest initiatives, the Regional Director, Wangi Mba-Uzoukwu said “AfricaMagic is always excited at being a part of the fast growing African film and television industry, we are equally excited at the opportunity to create pure African content, but more importantly, we have the chance to continue to tell the African story on a continent wide platform” adding that “this is a wonderful opportunity for anyone who truly believes he or she has what it takes to be a TV or film star and what better platform to launch an acting career, if not on the continent’s largest content provider and we are hopeful of a huge turnout at the auditions.”

    Tinsel and AfricaMagic Original Films is produced out of Nigeria and a testament to AfricaMagic’s commitment to the development of local content and support for skills development in Africa.

    Venues for the open audition are confirmed by AfricaMagic Production.

  • Gulder Club Ultimate berths in Enugu

    Gulder Club Ultimate berths in Enugu

    THE Nigeria’s mobile clubbing platform, Gulder Ultimate Club, will be making its third outing in Enugu on April 25 and 26, organizers have announced.

    Introduced by Gulder, a brand of Nigerian Breweries plc., the show which made debut in Port Harcourt in July last year, paraded top entertainers such as Kunle Afolayan, Beverly Naya, Tee A and Yaw, among others. Although it enjoyed an edge as a unique show, music lovers enjoyed a rare moment of clubbing with the stars.

    With more verve, the show moved to Lagos in December, recording a higher number of celebrities, including Genevieve Nnaji, D’banj, Frank Edoho, Dr SID, Jay Jay Okocha, Alex Okosi, Denrele, Tee-Y Mix, JJC and Weird MC who partied with other fun lovers in a ship-design ballroom by veteran movie set designer, Pat Nebo, at the Eko Hotel Convention Ground, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    Many travelled from different parts of the country to be part of the two-day Lagos edition.

    There are indications that the show may soar higher, with the announcement, Tuesday, of four of Africa’s hottest DJs and two dynamic hosts for the Enugu leg of the event.

    Otherwise called “The Coal City” Enugu is the nightlife destination of southeastern Nigeria, where every day is a celebration for party lovers who hang out at stylish bars and nightclubs.

    “Enugu is a special destination for us and we want the connection between Gulder and our friends in Enugu to be a fusion of a fully packed entertaining night with world-class performances,” said. Onyeka Okoli, Senior Brand Manager, Gulder. The idea, according to Okoli, is to take the club experience from city to city to engage and excite.

    Organisers are yet to announce details of hosts and performers, but many are already speculating that bona fide ‘Igbo boys’, Phyno, Ill Bliss, Raw, and Tony One Week are contenders.

    Club Ultimate is an innovative event, which transforms ordinary venues into a virtual club of urbane cabaret, DJs spin-off and unusual acrobatic performances invoking the fantasy wow effect. The fictional becomes reality, making it the most exciting clubbing event ever experienced in each region.

  • Documentary on Nigeria

    Documentary on Nigeria

    In her effort to rebrand Africa, Nigerian-American child prodigy,  Zuriel Oduwole,  has unveiled plans for a documentary on Nigeria titled “The New Nigeria”.  Zuriel last October began planning her script for this documentary which will showcase Nigerians making a difference, excelling globally, or defying the odds in the country to succeed. Zuriel hopes to paint a clearer and fresher picture – on the New Nigeria.
    For the documentary, she has identified five people, including Blessing Okagbare, Nigeria’s international athlete,  to be featured in the first edition.
    Okagbare was listed as one of the 100 influential Africans of 2013 in New Africa Magazine.

  • ‘As an Eyo  leader, I can  recite the ofo (incantations)  fluently’

    ‘As an Eyo leader, I can recite the ofo (incantations) fluently’

    Chief Rasheed Gbadamosi ranks among the luckiest in his generation. He became a commissioner in Lagos State at a young age of 27, and followed it up with the position of Minister of National Planning and Chairman, Petroleum Product Pricing and Regulatory Agency (PPRRA). In this interview with GBENGA ADERANTI and SEGUN AJIBOYE, the scion of a successful industrialist talks about his life, relationship with Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, career and his unparalleled passion for the arts, among other issues. Excerpts:

    You wanted to be a medical doctor but ended up an economist. What happened?

    In my time, you were either a doctor or a lawyer. You are talking about the 50s, when even your parents’ daily prayers for you were that ‘you’ll become a doctor or lawyer’. So, they were the in-thing in those days, and I am sure that there must be something to it. But thankfully, my biology was lousy. If I saw blood, I would scream and almost run mad. So in that respect, I was a non-starter. Secondly, my father was a successful businessman and member of the House of Assembly, self-tutored. My sister, Mrs. Folami, was the attorney-general of Lagos State.

    So your father was a member of the House of Assembly?

    Yes. Alhaji S.A. Gbadamosi, he was the treasurer of the Action Group. He was also a national executive member of the Action Group, and one of the founders of the group.

    How much of these would you say reflected on you?

    I went with him to campaigns. Akintola lived in our house. Many other top politicians of those days lived in our house. And they were part of my growing up process. Their children were my friends. So we all mingled, and my mother used to joke that ‘you young man, you’re going to be a politician’. She said this because I always read newspapers and I was very close to my father.

    Your mother thought you were going to be a politician. Was she right at the end of the day?

    The fact that I participated in public issues moved me near enough. All the appointments then came. I was public-spirited.

    Let us go back to the question of what you wanted to study. What we gathered was that as a successful businessman, your father wanted you take over the family business.

    That is absolutely true. I remember what transpired between us that day. We were approaching our school certificate examination period, and dad and I stood on the balcony, and he said ‘Young man, you’ll soon be done with your school certificate. What do you think you want to do?’ That was the first time we would be having such a discussion. I said I wanted to read medicine, but that my biology was not the best. And he just laughed and said something like ‘children of these days, you would go and read economics.’ As at that time, I had not heard about economics. So as soon as we completed the school certificate, I hopped on the plane and off to overseas.

    Was it the allure of overseas that made you agree to go abroad to study economics?

    I think it was assumed. But even before then, all the people that my father has had a hand in training had schooled abroad. And when the likes of SLA and HOD came back and stayed in our house, that made our house a spectacle.

    You were a commissioner in Lagos State at the age of 27. Don’t you think your generation was very lucky?

    If that is your interpretation, I think I accept it in good faith. It was a conference of circumstances. First, I had a background. And secondly, I had this profile, I was writing a great deal in the newspapers, especially the Sunday Times of those days. Sam Amuka, Gbolabo Ogunsanwo and others all knew me. I always contributed to the papers. I was writing a lot of analysis. I would analyse the budget and make deep comments, which I think must have come to the notice of the powers that be.

    Any regret not studying medicine?

    There couldn’t have been any regret. I soon fell in love with the science of economics and the allure of public discourse. Public affairs became a wonderful fascination. As a matter of fact, as soon as I entered the university, I was immersed in world affairs a great deal. I belonged to several organisations involved with world decolonisation. And the University of Manchester was a hotbed for world politics at the time. And when MPs came to give lectures at the university, we would bombard them with questions. Issues like the apartheid, Vietnam and the Eastern block captured our imaginations.

    While growing up, you were surrounded by great people like your dad, Awolowo, HOD Davies and others like them. How much of these imparted into you to form the kind of person you are today?

    Let me exemplify that by taking on one of the trials of the Action Group crisis. A lot of youngsters were affected by the socialist orientation. But my father would not want to hear it. He was a businessman, running his business successfully, running his factories and making his money. Whereas Chief Awolowo was rubbing minds with the left-wing people like Sam Ikoku and all the radicals of left-wing persuasion.

    Which side do I belong? Ideologically, I had my sympathy with these people, but my father was still my father, and my heart was with him. But in terms of the global dimension, I was a socialist. By the time I came back, Kanmi Ishola Osobu, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti and others had become my great friends. At the beginning, my father thought it would soon wear off and that I would come to his side to join him in the business, which I did. So the transition from a rabid left wing youngster to daddy’s assistant in the office, helping him to run the factory…

    (Cuts in) Most people in your age bracket are either members of Afenifere or other socio-cultural groups. You don’t seem to belong to any group. Do you have any particular reason for this?

    It is wonderful that you raised this. Erstwhile leader of Afenifere, Baba Abraham Adesanya, in-between seriousness and humouring, wondered why I would not join Afenifere and be part of what he thought my father would have been, the Yoruba persuasion of Afenifere. But I could not see myself in sectional politics like that. Looking at the national picture, I could not fathom a bifurcated political alliance like that. I mean if I were going to talk or reason about anything at all, it would be about Nigeria, Africa and world politics.

    But you’ll agree that Afenifere is not a political organisation.

    It is a cultural organisation, but tending towards politics.

    Is there any possibility you might still join?

    That is too late now.

    You are a businessman, a playwright and one with deep passion for the arts. When do you get all the energy to do all these from?

    Even me, I have always wondered where it comes from. Let me tell you a story of what happened to me recently. A childhood of mine dragged me and my wife to a shindig. It was the first time in a very long while that I would be up till about 2am, dancing and eating. The following day, I found myself sleeping all the day because I couldn’t cope with the deprivation of sleep. And so I said to myself, is this what I would be doing if I were a politician? But let me say something here, the assignments I had for the country, as a commissioner in Lagos State, and more importantly, as a federal minister, were gripping and of high concentration. But thank God, it was for a short period, but which was very tasking. Abdusalami did not appoint an oil minister, so some of those responsibilities were taken up by me. Within the period, I had a neck pain which didn’t leave me for about six months because you would just wake up and be asked to proceed to Geneva or to proceed to New York. You didn’t know how many hours you spend flying all over the world. It was so tasking, and I really didn’t know that I was made of that stuff.

    This was a period when the country was trying to democratise.

    Exactly, we were democratising, and it was taking a lot of tolls in terms of what we did and how we did it. And Abdusalami was absolutely insisting on quitting along with his team. It was a fine legacy, and I am very proud of that.

    Your period at the PPRA, how did you get the appointment?

    I was sitting down, minding my own business when President Olusegun Obasanjo sent somebody to me to say they wanted me to come and help.

    But you accepted to serve once again.

    Yes, of course. I will not really turn down an offer to serve my nation. It is a national assignment. Although it wasn’t a full-time job, but it turned out to be very tough, locking horns with Adams Oshiomhole and his men. We had to endure six strikes led by Oshiomhole.

    So Adams Oshiomhole gave you people tough time?

    Of course, he did (laughter).

    Do you have any particular regret about that period?

    There is none at all. I was doing what I thought I had to do in terms of policy choices. Being an economist, you would be confronted all the times by choices.

    Looking back, what would you love to have done differently, starting from when you were a commissioner, a federal minister and in the PPRA?

    It was a progression in terms of accumulation of knowledge, service to humanity and trying to make the country better.

    You were with Obasanjo and Abdusalami. Many people have said so many things about these two, including the good, the bad and the ugly.

    (Cuts in) I don’t know about that (laughter).

    Kindly give us a little insight into these two men.

    I think their military background makes them rather stern and decisive. I found out that whatever I presented to them, say ‘sir, how would you advise me on this?’, I found them exceptionally exemplary, if you like. In terms of policy choices, they were both discerning. And I picked up a lot of lessons from their capacity to take decisions. I went through some tutelage in statesmanship.

    Could this be as a result of the respect they have for you?

    On the contrary, the respect I have for them.

    Let’s look at your passion for the arts. At what point did you fall in love with arts?

    For me, art is an alternative definition for beauty of life. You look at mother art and all the things that are attributed to us to have pleasure, and you could get yourself involved in it or you could be a bystander. Most of us are bystanders. There are those of us who immerse ourselves in it than others. So, that has been my own choice.

    I loved literature in my secondary school days. I was taught by my seniors whom my white teachers thought I should emulate to hone my skill in literary expression. And I decided to take an interest in whatever was going on around me. Alongside reading for economics and reading the literature of dissent and politics of agitation, I found myself reading about protest literature. Those are the expressions of my generation. And that transmitted into literature of drama and literary readings of literature of protest and appealing to the young minds. By the time you find yourself immersed in all that, you find yourself adoring creative efforts, adoring what people are drawing and what people are composing, like in the case of Fela; and Fela and I became great friends. There is something I found fascinating about him, the ability to translate songs into protest songs. When you compose songs and talk about life’s absurdities. You know, 24 hours in a man’s life cannot just be taken up by sitting down reading, eating. You have to be engaged in what goes on around you. In French literature, there is a play, which translates into ordinary English that you must always be engaged in what goes on in the society. You cannot just sit down and wish that something happens. Get up and do something, go on the streets and protest and share views with your countrymen. And so, Kanmi Ishola-Osobu, Fela Anikulapo Kuti and others, together we formed an association. I was the secretary.

    All these people that you mentioned are known radicals. What about you?

    Of course, we are all radicals, nobody will deny this.

    But unlike them, you didn’t get into any trouble with the government.

    I spent two weeks in Kirikiri prison.

    What offence did you commit?

    I wrote a play.

    What play was this?

    It was called Trees grow in the desert.

    Was it a protest play?

    It had elements of dissent in it, and Gowon said they should come for me because it was playing on radio. He listened to it on a Sunday afternoon, and said ‘go and get that guy, whoever wrote it’. So I was arrested and put in Kirikiri. My father was worried and sent people to ask Jakande why his son was sent to Kirikiri prison. In the end, they saw that I was harmless. But till tomorrow, Gowon would see me and laugh and joke about it. He would say ‘Eh, my prisoner, how are you today?’.

    Can you give us a conservative figure that you have spent on arts?

    I cannot put a figure to it.

    Would it be millions, billions or more?

    Definitely it cannot be billions. Where would I get that from?

    Okay then, how much would you say that you have spent to purchase a single arts collection?

    I have paid something in the range of N6 million or N8 million for a collection.

    You knew Fela intimately. What is it that you knew about him that the world didn’t know?

    Hardly anything. His life was public knowledge. The most moving fallout from my relationship with him was attending to him at his death bed in his house. And Dede Mabiaku, who was one of his disciples, came looking for us when he was very, very ill and at the point of dying. And I looked for Wole Burknor, who was our chairman, to inform him that one of us was dying. So we trooped to his house in Kalakuta Republic, and proceeded to take him to the hospital.

    Up and till that time, Fela was still very rascally, refusing to go to any hospital. But at that last minute, he finally submitted himself and we drove him to the farthest hospital so that the prying eyes of journalists would not know where he was. So we took him to a hospital in Lagos Island. But it was too late, and few days later, he was gone.

    Looking at him in those last moments, what went on through your mind?

    It was sorrowful. Resonance of his songs and compositions came flooding through my mind. The world should not have lost such a person.

    Are you blaming the world for his death?

    The society in general, I mean all the beatings that he got, they must have no doubt taken a toll on him.

    Do you still listen to his music?

    Of course, I still listen to his music. I am one of his greatest fans.

    What is your attitude to religion?

    My father brought me into this world as a Muslim. And I took my Rasheed as a name, and I try to live by Islamic tenets, though I cannot claim to be the most religious. I respect the religion like I would respect any other religion. I even went to a Methodist primary school, and I got a distinction in Christian Religious Study.

    What is your attitude to traditional religion?

    There is a lot of philosophy in it. I have just rediscovered my D.O. Fagunwa novels, and you know you can get a lot of philosophical ideas in them. I am the Chairman of Eyo Agere in Lagos; I inherited that title. There is nothing fetish about it. It is a cultural and entertainment thing, especially where you need to learn all the sayings and ofo (incantations).

    So you can conveniently recite the ofo?

    Sure, I have to know them in order to lead my flock (general laughter).