Category: Glamour

  • Stay in the shade

    Stay in the shade

    A fashion accessory that is always in vogue among women irrespective of their age is a pair of sunglasses. Cool and Stylish, this useful accessory not only helps in keeping your eyes protected from the harsh sun and pollution but it also it gives you a glamorous look. Recently, over sized glasses have become a popular choice of accessories for girls and they are making all kinds of statements with it. While buying sunglasses, it is advisable that you look for unique shades and tints so that you stand out among your peers.

    Sunglasses with white frames are very unique; they look quite feminine and chic. It goes without saying that a good pair of sunglasses with UV protection is an essential in any wardrobe, any day of the year, or you can do damage to those pretty eyes. They’ll also keep you from squinting, which causes wrinkles and is never a good look. But a pair of sunnies at-the-ready can do so much more. Big sunglasses camouflage a late night. They’re great when you need to hide for any reason. They can also be a great asset if you’re tired, or if you’re not in the mood to be social. They make a heck of a better statement than a grumpy face or bloodshot eyes and tend to work on most facial shapes.

  • How to  choose  the right  clothes

    How to choose the right clothes

    PEOPLE who are dieting and self-conscious about their weight and body image often try to make themselves invisible. They will go to extraordinary lengths to hide their bodies away under baggy clothes until they have had some success with their diet and have lost weight.

    It’s true that there’s something comforting about pulling on a big baggy jumper and some jogging pants but this shouldn’t be a daily uniform.

    Instead, you should learn how to tailor your wardrobe to your particular body shape and emphasise the positive aspects. Just because you’re on a diet and haven’t yet achieved your goal weight doesn’t mean you can’t get glammed up and go out on the town and be extremely limiting, and this can make shopping trips a stressful, rather than pleasurable, experience.

  • Toyin Lawani on nine-month course

    PRETTY and very light-skinned Toyin Lawani’s appearance on the social scene has not been without idle talk. There were speculations that she was romantically involved with a prominent public official in Lagos State. A frequent party goer, Lawani’s flashy looks and highflying lifestyle set her apart. Well, the news making the rounds is that she is expecting her second child and she is currently in Dubai shopping for the unborn baby.

  • Biodun  Shobanjo’s  punctuality

    Biodun Shobanjo’s punctuality

    CHAIRMAN of Troyka Holdings, Biodun Shobanjo, is fond of one thing: punctuality. Those close to the marketing communication guru say he detests late-coming, or what is often described as African time. Sometime ago, the Ogun State-born advertising man was invited to an event. He was there on time and after waiting for one hour, the headhoncho of Nigeria’s largest marketing communication conglomerate took his leave, saying his time was precious.

    Shobanjo, adjudged Nigerian Advertising Man of the Century, quit his job as the Deputy Managing Director of Grant Advertising (the second largest advertising agency in Nigeria at the time) in 1979 to the surprise of many, to start Insight Communications driven by the quest, in his words, “to be number one.”

  • Delores  Odogwu’s  hope rising

    Delores Odogwu’s hope rising

    DELORES, one of the daughters of Asaba high chief, Sonny Odogwu, has successfully carved a niche for herself in the social stratum. Though her crashed marriage to Abuja-based Stan Rerri made her withdraw into her shell, Delores is gradually putting this behind her, as she has found love and seems to be giving marriage another shot.

  • Nollywood actress, Amaka Anioji, discloses her favourite things to Kehinde Falode

    Nollywood actress, Amaka Anioji, discloses her favourite things to Kehinde Falode

    Favourite shoe designer

    Not a stickler for brand names, I usually buy what fits and is trendy, and of course qualitative, but I patronise Christian Loubotin and Manolo  Blahnik.

     

    Favourite bag designer

    Prada, Chanel and Louis Vuitton

     

    Favourite wristwatch

    DKNY and Guess

     

    Favourite perfume

    Glow by Jlo

    (Jennifer Lopez)

     

    Faviourite Nigerian designer

    I really like a lot of Nigerian designers but Deola Sagoe comes to mind

     

    Favourite pet

    Dog

     

    Favourite holiday destination

    Bahamas and Rome

     

    Favourite nail polish

    Not really huge on brands but I like Deborah Lippmann

     

    Favourite jewellery

    Costumes

     

    Favourite car

    Toyotas and Peugeot for durability on Nigerian roads

  • Terry Waya, the  unrepentant socialite

    Terry Waya, the unrepentant socialite

    IN his glory days, Benue State-born multimillionaire Terry Waya held sway on the social scene. He achieved public notoriety a few years ago when his 40th birthday party in London drew more than half of Nigeria’s state governors as well as other top public officials. Terry, who was known for throwing one-in-town parties, was a major force at the height of Ibori’s tenure. At a point, his name became synonymous with fun-seeking and partying. Many people will not forget in a hurry his romance with one of the flower girls of high society, Eno Olafisoye. The love birds have a baby boy to show for the romance.

    Before one could say Jack, the popular Abuja big boy and socialite went on self-imposed exile when some of his friends ran into troubled waters with the law.

    He seems to have put all these behind him and begun to take the centre stage again.

  • Dakore  Akande rocks baby  bump

    Dakore Akande rocks baby bump

    CONTRARY to the news making the rounds that the marriage of screen diva, Dakore Egbuson, to Olumide, son of the billionaire cum politician, Chief Harry Akande, will take her off the klieglights, the mother of one has continued to rock the social circuit.

    The Bayelsa State-born actress co-hosted the Nollywood Movies Awards last weekend.

    Not only did she anchor the event well, she proudly rocked baby bump. This is the second baby of the screen star. The couple already had a two-year-old daughter.

  • Why Nollywood marriages  breakdown –Iyabo Ojo

    Why Nollywood marriages breakdown –Iyabo Ojo

    Iyabo Ojo, Nollywood actress, is a household name and a front-liner in the Yoruba movie circle even as she maintains a crossover appeal with the English counterpart. Noted more for her girl-about-town roles, Ojo is also a film producer of class, having churned out award-wining flicks like Omo Gomina and Arinzo currently making waves, and Tembelu just waiting to be released. She spoke to Gboyega Alaka on a number of industry issues, including her latest works, the susceptibility of Nollywood marriages, piracy and her newly opened beauty clinic.

     

     

    YOU are one actress who’s got a peculiar swagger to your personality, especially when acting the girl-about-town roles; where did all that come from?

    Well I guess that might suggest that I kind of grew up in the streets. But not at all; I’m actually a very homely girl. My grandmother is Ibo and in Ibo tradition, after school, the next thing for the woman is the kitchen. So I’m a relatively homely girl. But where did I get all the swag and charisma from? First, I’d say from God. When I started acting, I started going out a lot, to events, to nightclubs; and when I’m out there, I try to study people a lot. I see how the town girls behave, how they talk; more especially those with unusual characters.

    Have you at any time suffered stigmatisation by people based on certain roles you have played?

    Yeah, a lot of that happens. I know I regularly play town-girl, bad babe, armed robber, criminal; and some people unfortunately tend to see me in that light, probably because of my look or because I play it well and maybe because I also have tattoos on me. I know people tend to regard those of us wearing tattoos like, ‘Oh, she has tattoos, so she must be a very baaaaad girl.’ However, when they have the opportunity of getting close to me, the equation usually changes and the next thing is ‘Iyabo, are you always this quiet?’

    Your latest film, Arinzo, has all the trappings of a blockbuster, what has been the response in the market?

    It’s been wonderful. Even up till this moment, I keep getting messages from my fans and they’re just loving it. The good news is that the concluding part is going to be out this September and I’m sure they can’t wait to see it. This is the first time I’m dividing my films into two, which is a way of combating the piracy menace; but I’m glad they’re looking beyond that.

    Aside Arinzo, what other films have you produced?

    I have Tembelu. It’s the first old school comedy in Yoruba. The promo is already out; but we want the concluding part of Arinzo to hit the market before we release it. And there is Enu Orofo which I shot for Gbeminiyi Adegbola, who has been my P. A. for over nine years. She’s the producer, but I am the executive producer. Of course, I have talked about Omo Gomina. Timbale is in the studio, as we speak, and once that is out, I’ll be going on location again to shoot another movie.

    What were the challenges making that movie, considering that it is a Yoruba movie, shot mainly in Ghana and featuring some Ghanaian acts as well?

    What I do usually before I go into any production is plan ahead. It took me a year before I got myself ready to shoot Arinzo, going back and forth to Ghana to get the right person to stand for me and co-ordinate activities. And once I got that person, she took charge and made sure all logistics worked well for a smooth shooting. However, it was capital-intensive, but because we had planned it ahead, it wasn’t outrightly difficult to accomplish.

    When you shoot a film outside Nigeria, do you have to pay some kind of fee or you just move in and shoot?

    Of course we pay, like when I went to shoot the film Omo Gomina in South Africa. I also had a co-ordinator on ground, who took care of all the fees, while I just made the fund available. In Ghana, we had to pay for the fact that we were coming to shoot in the country. We also paid for the airport that we used in the film; we paid for the police because we used real policemen and their vans and their guns. We even had to fill a form; we had to send a letter ahead, even to the university that we used, for approval – the university didn’t take a dime.

    Tell us of the challenges of being an actress?

    The major challenge that comes with being an actress is that people tend to have a different opinion about you based on what they watch. Aside that, a lot of people want to be your friend, or want you to be their mentor. And if you don’t respond the way they want – because you can’t respond accordingly to everybody’s expectation – it becomes a problem. There is also the part where people violate your privacy and write a lot of things about you that may or may not be true. Apart from these, being an actress is just an interesting experience. It can be very tasking and strenuous but you learn to manage that.

    Nollywood is replete with cases of broken marriages, and here you are too, a single mother who was once married….

    I wasn’t even a star when I got married. And when I got out of my marriage, I still wasn’t a star. Up until I got married, I’d only featured in one film, Satanic, and I pulled out of the industry the moment I got married. So I wasn’t acting in those years that I was married. I was a full-time housewife and businesswoman. And so if I had problems with my marriage, it had nothing to do with my acting profession. I actually chose to come back into acting because I had started having issues with my marriage and knew it wasn’t making me happy. And I knew that wasn’t the way I wanted to live my life. Yes, there are lots of problems in celebrity marriages; and the reason is that as celebrities, we live in our own world. We work hard a lot, moving from one location to the other; and usually when a female in the industry meets a male guy who just comes from the blues, he usually comes with a lot of loaded lies and sweeps some of these colleagues of mine off their feet. And they in turn are not patient enough to study these guys well enough, because ‘society expects them to be married.’ So people tend to marry for specific reasons, and as far as I am concerned, you mustn’t be able to define the reason you love someone to the extent of marriage. Once you get married for a reason, then there is a problem. I got married because I was pregnant. That was a reason. My husband married me because I was pregnant for him. That was also a reason. Most men get married to ladies in the industry because of the celebrity aura around them, only to realise that there is a lot to marriage than that. They also discover that in reality, these ladies aren’t as perfect as the screens project them. And then the men cannot get used to the ego that comes with the profession and typically want to be the man and break those wings. And if the woman is such that wouldn’t be tamed, then there is a crisis and a collision.

    Piracy continues to be a problem in Nigeria. As a major player, how do you view the menace?

    It’s annoying. It’s frustrating. You know Arinzo came out on a Monday; now by Tuesday the following day, a friend of mine went to the market and bought a pirated copy. Now, the CD didn’t just contain Arinzo alone, but two other films were added and sold at a hundred naira. It’s that bad. Now some of us want to shoot good movie, but when you spend so much money on a film and you don’t make that money back, then you get discouraged. And that’s why we keep saying that the government need to set up a task force with a primary responsibility of dealing with this menace, just as they have KAI Brigade dealing with people who cross the highways.

    Let’s talk about FESPRIS, your new beauty clinic.

    FESPRIS is a combination of my two children, Festus and Priscilla. It opened officially on August 11, 2013 and it’s basically a beauty clinic where we have a spa, do scrub, facials; we also have the salon where you do your hair, nail studio for nails, manicure and pedicure; the tattoo section, where you can have your tattoos and piercing. I also have my office here from where I run my business, because I’m also into events management. I have ushers, I have models and I also do bridal beads, bridal make-up; and cakes of all sorts.

     

     

     

     

  • Nicole Scherzinger still  in love with Lewis Hamilton

    Nicole Scherzinger still in love with Lewis Hamilton

    NICOLE Scherzinger is still totally in love with Lewis Hamilton, according to X Factor star Jahmene Douglas. According to Jahmene, Nicole still very much has feelings for Lewis and with them being such good pals after she mentored him on The X Factor, we reckon he is a pretty reliable source. Speaking to The Mirror, Jahmene said: “I know that she is in love with Lewis. And I’ve been with her as a friend while she was with him and when they broke up.” Jahmene, whose album is currently number one in the chart, went on to confess that he has been a shoulder to cry on for Nicole since she split from the Formula One driver: “I am trying to be there for her, because it is a tough time. It isn’t easy to switch off after spending five years in a relationship. I think it was just obvious that the distance thing might have taken its toll.”