Category: Sunday magazine

  • I never forget  who I was -Akin Lewis

    I never forget who I was -Akin Lewis

    Akin Akintola Lewis became a popular face back in the 70s through a television series, Why Worry. The versatile actor recently celebrated his 40th year in the world of art . He shares with Adetutu Audu his journey to stardom.

    CONGRATULATIONS on your 40th anniversary. What does it mean to you to be 40 years on stage?

    It is a whole lifetime for me; it’s 40 years of dealing with life about life in life. You know, it’s a whole lot. It’s been 40 years of educating, entertaining, fun, hard work and meeting and knowing people.

    What would you say attracted you to the acting world?

    My dad used to buy me comic books, literature books and all of that and I used to take part in all these children’s TV programmes, and I was very active in dramatic and debating societies while I was in primary school. When I got to secondary school too, I was very active, really active. So, by the time I was sitting for my WAEC (West African Examinations Council) exams, I knew what I wanted to be.

    Theatre practitioners were seen as never do-wells in those days. Did you suffer any opposition from your parents?

    My father was an engineer and I have brothers and sisters who were accountants, so everybody expected me to either be an engineer or an accountant, but I wanted to be a theatre practitioner. And in those days, there really wasn’t money in it like we have now. You know, it wasn’t the best of profession to choose at that time; in fact, I had a fall-out with my dad because of it.

    So, how were you able to win them over?

    When I became a star, that was when the whole fight got settled. He saw clearly what it was all about and he would be boasting and telling his friends, oh! Do you know my son? That’s my son now! I used to do a very popular programme, Why Worry, then in Ibadan. When I became a star because of that programme, everything finished, no more fight.

    You became a star at the tender age of 22 when you acted the role of a 60-year-old in Why Worry. What was it like, coming from a background where you were not known?

    It was incredible. It wasn’t as if I wasn’t known at all then, because we were doing a lot of TV dramas and all of that, but it was astronomical. The rise to stardom and suddenly, everybody wasn’t thinking about oh! theatre art is not good; everybody now wanted their sons or their children to study drama. And for me, everybody wanted to be my friend. You know, people would offer to buy me drinks, offer to pay for my food if I went to the restaurant; it was incredible, just the stardom.

    Since theatre practice was not paying handsomely, how were you able to cope financially?

    It wasn’t very lucrative at that time to be a theatre practitioner. First and foremost, it wasn’t structured. Something happened at NTA Ibadan, the General Manager then, Dr. Faronbi, created a drama unit and I was part of it. That place, he now structured it, so that we were now receiving stable salaries like everybody else. So it became very structured; we were able to sit down, write plays, act, direct and produce and as a matter of fact, we went further to produce all those big theatre artists who were the likes of ‘Baba Sala’ and co.; that was what helped us. But even then, we were still all very young, we were single, so it wasn’t a big deal. But then when we got married and it became very necessary to have very regular meals on the table and that was again when I realised that I needed a surplus income. What I then did was to look for a parallel profession which then led me into the corporate world. That’s how I started doing marketing, advertising, public relations and all of that.

    Fame attracts women and you hit the limelight before you married, how easy was it for you to pick a wife?

    It was a bit difficult, but you see in those days, times were better, girls had proper upbringing, home training and all of that, so if you needed to find a wife, just look at the background, the family, the pedigree and you are likely to get a girl that is very stable and all of that, unlike today. Yes, I was a Romeo of sort, but the truth is, they say out of 1001 girlfriends, it’s the one on top that’s the lucky one. So, just look at the background and you fill like, oh! This one comes from a good home and it will show; she won’t run around, you are not likely to find her going to club and stuffs like that, so you’ll know that, maybe, this is your own.

    Aside from her background, being a Romeo at that time, what was the edge the lucky lady had over others?

    I guessed she just fell in love with me. Well, I was popular as it were. It took me like one year to woo her before she agreed because she was like, this guy… it took like one year. And I was starting to get not interested anymore, and then she started showing interest and all of that. Em! I guess I have always been my natural self, very exuberant, outgoing and you know, I didn’t have money then but we had prospects, so I guess all of those things put together.

    Getting into the corporate world then, how were you able to juxtapose the two; doing the world of art and the corporate world?

    The truth is, I don’t know, if you ask me. It was tough, but I’m a very scheduled person, very organised and what I would do most of the time, I was doing overnight recordings or weekend recordings or just take my leave and do the corporate thing. I was always a very tired person, you work during the day, during the night; and I knew that if I wanted to still remain in this industry, I had to do that. You don’t want to get out, because once you get out, you can’t make any more impact, people forget you. So I needed to stay there, so it was, well, the grace of God and a lot of hard work and organisation.

    Will it be right to say you found a way of staying back in the industry while you were working in the corporate world simply because you wanted to keep your relevance in the industry or keep your face in the public?

    Yes! The thing for me is, I always knew I was coming back full time because to me this is my first love, this is it. I knew that if I had to come back, then I had to be relevant, otherwise, I’d have to go and start again. So, that’s why as a strategy, I had one foot in there, and one foot in here (one in the corporate, one in the entertainment); and that’s how I kept it, so when I finally retired from corporate, it was easy for me to continue.

    How were you able to fit in back, judging from the angle of the pay you were earning in the corporate world, compared to what is obtainable in the entertainment world?

    Oh! By the time I was leaving the corporate world, the entertainment industry…there had been a boom, a very big boom, you know, so it wasn’t difficult at all because I was already a star; a premium actor, it was just a matter of getting the jobs and doing the plus and minuses. I was earning as much as I was earning there, maybe more.

    So, if you want to look at the past with what is obtainable at the moment, can you compare the two in terms of pluses and the minuses?

    In those days, we had highly trained people. I’m telling you, even if you didn’t go to school, you are with one professional group or the other, highly trained. These days, there are not many trained people around, everybody thinks they are this and that; they don’t know the most of it. In those days there was not much money in it, but today there is a lot of money. If you become a star, it is your face, that’s what will sell you, so you earn a lot of money. In those days, of course, the technology was very low, the cassette we’re used to came in discs that were very big. Now you have it in small sizes and then of course in those days even your popularity was limited to probably the channels that the TV station was showing; for us then in those days was eh! Channels 3, 4, 5 and 7 which took care of Ibadan, Lagos, Ilorin, Ogun State and all of that, but these days, there is satellite digital all over the world, there is internet; there is phone that is mobile and all of that. So, today I’m saying that your face is all over the world. Before, maybe it’s just your locality, those are the pluses and minuses.

    Can you share with us some of your memorable moments?

    There are projects you cannot forget in a hurry. For instance, Madam Dearest, I know that I have to use all of those feelings, the emotions, cry, was happy, I was sad, I laughed and all of that. I remember Mind Bending where I had to play a drug addict, I had to go and spend like a week at Yaba with the doctors and the inmates, so I could know how to do these things and that was tough, very tough, and so you get to remember those trainings. Of course I remember when we were training in the school of drama, we used to say then that the only place tougher than the school of drama was the army; that was how tough it was.

    Would you say you are fulfilled?

    I am much fulfilled. Up till this point, there is nothing that I set my mind to that I have not done; you know but tomorrow it’s another day, I’m very fulfilled. Maybe if the boom came when we were also a lot younger, maybe we would have had a longer time of enjoying the proxy but here we are still relevant even now, we are still. In life, there are old, young, middle age. We grow in stages, but I’m fulfilled.

    What legacy are you leaving for the industry?

    Yabake Youths Foundation for Arts is concerned about helping the moving art. Ours is the moving arts, helping it to realise itself better by helping young talents to be better in what they do and how they do it. And this is what formed the school. It is through the school that the foundation will take care of all of these shortcomings in the young talents and even practicing practitioners too, the professionals.

    You have been scandal-free, what is the secret?

    We all come from different backgrounds, but what makes your pedigree? It is the home from where you came, the schools that you attended, your teachers, the kind of work you do, your friends and all of that. I guess my pedigree helped me in a lot of ways and like I told you, I always want to be the best and so I took a conscious effort, because I took conscious decision just to be who I am because I know doing what I do, I am a mentor to many. I am a role model to many and I realise that I can’t go around to just be messing up, I need to be focused and so with God helping me, I was very focused but it was a conscious decision that I took to be scandal-free. I’m not a saint, it is just that if you decide to live a straight way, you will; if you want to go the wicked path, you will and then again one of the things they teach us in the school of drama, the first rule, the cardinal rule is ‘you never forget who you are’. So it doesn’t matter the role that I take, once I finish, I wash my face, I clean-up, I change, I’m Akin Lewis again and I go home. Because I play a billionaire, now must I act like a billionaire, now I go and start doing some things and then fall into trouble? I don’t do that.

    Is there anything you would like to change about yourself?

    If there is anything I would like to change about myself, maybe it has already happened. When I was younger, I used to be on a fast lane, I was always anxious, things needed to happen like yesterday, but right now it doesn’t happen like that anymore. I realised that, eh, take it easy man! I guess with age, wisdom has come to bear; there is nowhere you are rushing to, like my people say, the water you’ll drink will not flow beyond you.

    -Akin Lewis

  • Folake Folarin- Coker’s soaring  profile

    Folake Folarin- Coker’s soaring profile

    FOLAKE Folarin-Coker, Artistic Director of premier African fashion label, Tiffany Amber Nigeria, has scooped the Women Inspiration Enterprise Award at the 2013 WIE Symposium in Cape Town, South Africa. The Enterprise Award honoured the trailblazing businesswoman who have broken barriers and brought innovation and change to the corporate world.

    Folake is also listed in the WIE 60 Power Influencers in Africa. The WIE Power Influencers list showcases the women shaping Africa’s future.

    Previous winners of the prestigious WIE awards include, Iman, Dame Vivian Westwood, Supermodel Christy Turlington, Dr Jill Biden and Melinda Gates, among many others.

  • ‘Why Nigerians are returning home’

    ‘Why Nigerians are returning home’

    Omisola Olubunmi left Nigeria for Canada 16 years ago. Now she is back home with her bag full of stories. Taiwo Abiodun met her and reports

    SHE was a fairly comfortable business woman who ran a profitable printing business, sold printing machines and materials. She was also into property business. However, when the lure of catching the proverbial Golden Fleece caught her she left her fledging business and moved to Canada to join her husband. She sold some and gave the rest to charity hoping to make it big on getting to Canada.

    Welcome to the world of Omisola Olubunmi.

    On getting to Canada it was a different story entirely! It was not the Eldorado she expected; it was in a different world. According to her,” I was doing well here in Nigeria, I once worked in the Statistics Data base of the Ondo State Ministry of Education and had risen to a senior post before quitting. Later, I worked with the late Bishop Adetiloye of Anglican Church in Marina and another professor before I went into private business in printing, selling and supplying printing equipment. I had a big shop in Balogun which was popular but when I had to join my husband I decided to sell off my property. I was in high spirits.”

     

    Starting all over again in Canada

    When she arrived Canada, “I found the environment was not easy or conducive to cope with because of the cold weather. It was different totally from where I was coming from but I always have the belief that whatever or wherever I found myself I would find my level. The environment was totally different from our own in everything and I had to start from the scratch. Our educational system in Nigeria is different from their own so my certificate could not match theirs and I had to go back to school. In Canada age does not matter.”

    According to her, “Since I had no choice and in order to get something doing I went to school. I made sure that I didn’t allow my age to affect me, if I want to change my profession, if you want to change it don’t consider your age, I started in a factory environment.

    “I went to adult day school, after the first four weeks they called me to tell me that I did not belong to the class and I was promoted to Post 12 Advance and within a year I was able to catch up, then I applied to school, and started attending Nursing school, when I finished I said to myself supposing I finished this school and there is no job what do I do? I then went into community project by assisting in community work.

    “I applied and added social work. I finished my Nursing School in 2001, when it was about seven weeks to complete my studies they called me and asked me whether I would like to work with them and I said Yes , seven weeks before graduating I started working with them that is how I was integrated. I then started my Nursing career there, I later went for my degree in Nursing, right now I specialized in Critical Care Nursing (Advanced Nursing ). At the end I thank God that things went well.”

     

    Advise for Nigerians back home

    Asked whether emigration was good, she confessed that if one has a good job emigrating was not worth it. “we are blessed in this country. What we only need is good leadership that would lead us to the right place. If you ask or tell your siblings to stay back home and not to bother himself from coming to suffer in overseas they would say they are being discouraged. You can’t convince people unless they are there and see what we are facing, because if you try to explain what it is to survive there, they won’t believe you. The fact is that for me, we were stuck there! We could not come back home and therefore had no choice than to find one way or the other to survive there. For me, it was difficult to come back home empty handed. I had already sold all I had in life, my belongings and property so what will I fall back upon? I’ve my aged mother, my siblings at home and other friends, and would I now go back to them and ask them to start feeding me?” she asked.

    She recounted one of the hectic days :”One day, I knelt down and prayed to God, I cried unto Him not to put me to shame. I worked in factories with machines, at times my fingers would be frozen and dead because of the cold! Each time I remembered home I cried. I know those who have spent 40 years there and cannot come back home because you need to pay bills unlike Nigeria where you can beg not to cut off your light but there the light will turn off itself after exhausting your money! Everything is computerized. I had to work in different places in order to meet up with my needs. I am hardworking, there was nothing I did not do to survive except crime.”

    She continued :”I switched to their Volunteer Association, joined Nigeria Diaspora Association Organization (NIDO), from here I joined Egbe Omo Yoruba Chapter in Toronto which was founded over 40 years ago. I was one of the Board Directors of NIDO, and now the President of Yoruba Community Association in Toronto. We are planning on how to assist Nigerians living there to come back home and settle. I am not saying that we are all suffering there, no, we have many Nigerians who are doing well and successful there. Nigerians are very brilliant and enterprising over there but how many can we count on our fingertips?”

    Olubunmi lauded the efforts of Abike Dabiri who is the chair of the House of Representatives on Diaspora. She said her committee is working with others in the Diaspora to ensure they live well and are respected.

     

    Between Nigeria and Canada

    She is unhappy that despite the fact that Nigerian leaders travel a lot they have not been able to replicate most of the good things they see abroad. For instance, “There in Canada if you are sick the government will take care of you but here if anything happens to you it is you and your family, I hope government will try its best to assist us in Nigeria and put things right. We need to plan, we are still using outdated data, obsolete hospital equipment and many other things yet we are blessed with manpower and mineral resources. We need not to complain. If things are put right nobody will be yearning to travel out.”

    On why she came home, she said: “I lost my mother, she died at the ripe age of 90.Then my family members and community members pressurized me to come and take the chieftaincy title conferred on me by our king in Efon Alaye. According to them it is in appreciation of my contributions to the development of the town especially the youth in the community. At the initial stage I rejected the chieftaincy title saying it is against my Christian faith, later I discovered that it will draw me get closer to my root; it is not fetish and does not contradict the Holy Bible. My kinsmen and the traditional leaders of my community, Efon Alaaye in Ondo state recognized my contribution and support to the community and made me Chief Yeyese of Efon Alaaye.”

    According to Olubunmi, Yorubas in Canada are really helping to assist citizens at home. A non-profit organization known as ‘Books and Resources for Africa’ is being championed by Mr. Michael Kehinde Abiodun in Toronto, Canada. He is the Secretary of Yoruba Association in Toronto, he wants to be sending these items home to rural schools, clinics in rural areas where they can be useful.” She added that the Yoruba – speaking people in Canada are teaching their children how to read and write in Yoruba language in order not to be lost, she stated ” I am the President of Yoruba Association in Toronto, now that is part of our Programme in Canada that we should be teaching our children our culture. My children would wake up in the morning and kneel down or prostrate to greet me, at the initial stage the oyinbos see it as funny but now they are emulating us. Our culture is the richest in the continent. We are the envy of other tribes. Yoruba is well -cultured, and they are incomparable. Now, many of us are planning to come back home and settle down peacefully, so we are trying to do one thing or the other in order to be fully integrated into Nigerian society here. If you want to destroy a community, take its language first and the community is finished. We don’t want our culture to be destroyed, we want our children to know about our values and culture so we are doing all these things. We are teaching or coaching our children Yoruba language in Canada. In fact, some of these white men have learnt how to speak, teach and write in Yoruba, not only this, they know our proverbs and culture more than some of us , that is why we should quickly gear up or else they will end up coming here to teach us our own culture!”

  • Bolatito Ladoja  gets wedding date

    Bolatito Ladoja gets wedding date

    BOLATITO Ladoja, the daughter of former Oyo State governor, Rashidi Ladoja, who got engaged to alternative-soul singer, Bez, in May 2013, has picked 4 January to solemnise the union. Bolatito, a banker with FCMB, is a graduate of International Relations from Warwick University, UK with Masters in Management from Imperial College, London. The talented singer and guitarist, Emmanuel Bezhiwa Idakula, popularly known as Bez, started dating when he was an undergraduate at Covenant University. The Accord Party chieftain, we learnt, is leaving no stone unturned to make the day grand. On May 1st 2013, Bez announced his engagement to the ex-governor’s daughter through his publicist.

  • Tundun  Abiola’s  marriage  finally  collapses

    Tundun Abiola’s marriage finally collapses

    THERE is unconfirmed news making the rounds that all may not be well with the marriage of Tundun, one of the daughters of the acclaimed winner of June 12, 1993, election the late Bashorun MKO Abiola, to Benue State-born Atama Attah. To put paid to the speculations, Attah last weekend remarried. He signed the dotted lines with the Special Adviser to President Jonathan on Job Creation, Josephine Washima. Attah, businessman and popular socialite, we gathered, moved on few months after his divorce to Tudun was granted. They separated last year after only three years of marriage.

    Delectable Tundun is a lawyer by training, she cut her teeth in the legal profession at the famous FRA Williams chamber before going on to work with Senator Gbemi Saraki as her legislative assistant.

  • Dewunmi Ogunsanya  wows with new edifice

    Dewunmi Ogunsanya wows with new edifice

    DEWUNMI Ogunsanya, the Chairman of Multichoice Nigeria, is one man that is not known to do things in half measure. For many years, the Multichoice chairman has operated smoothly on the business terrain without drawing much attention to himself. Recently, at the 20th anniversary of his company, he announced that all the guests should be given a DSTV explorer, which is still sending tongues wagging. Not yet done, the billionaire businessman unveiled a 5-bedroom gigantic edifice built on a massive expansive ‘prime land’ dubbed old Ikoyi.

    Sources said the edifice may be the businessman’s retirement home. The beautiful edifice, we learnt, is fully automated and it is powered by three giant generating sets.

    A lawyer by profession, the Lagos State-born businessman is the managing partner of Ogunsanya & Ogunsanya & Co (legal practitioners) apart from being the Chairman, Multichoice Nigeria Limited. He also has his hands in other pies.

  • Nollywood celebrates Christmas in style

    Nollywood celebrates Christmas in style

    MUSIC galore and fun extraordinaire pervaded the Oriental Hotel Lekki as Nollywood super stars celebrated this year’s Christmas in grand style. Mandy, the female comedian cracked the ribs of guests with jokes while Sheyi Shay thrilled the guests to sonorous music, with Kate Henshaw and Segun Arinze also performing at the exclusive party. Olusegun Rapheal was there.

  • Foluke’s top10

    Foluke’s top10

    Actress Foluke Daramola-Salako loves to look good all the time. Here she tells Mercy Michael her favourite things.

    Favourite Bag

    Louis Vuitton

     

    Favourite shoe

    Anything I am comfortable in. I prefer wedge because wedges are more comfortable.

     

    Favourite wristwatch

    One wristwatch designer I can’t do without is Michael Kors.

     

    Favourite sun glasses

    I love Michael Kors. I love Gucci

     

    Favourite vacation spot

    Dubai and South Africa

     

    Favourite music

    RnB, Country music – gentle man Jim Reeves. Others include old Ebenezer Obey and Sunday Ade. I also like Jazz- Kenny G (Jesmin flower)

     

    Favourite drink

    I’m beginning to like champagne

     

    Favourite TV programme

    Pastor Sam Adeyemi

     

    Favourite perfume

    I’m one person that collects perfumes. I do Gucci, Louis Vuitton, Elizabeth Ardine, Elizabeth Tailor, Glow by Jlo, and Hemmes. I don’t have less than 50 perfumes as I speak and I wear at least 10 at a time.

     

    Favourite food

    I like vegetable. I like dodo. And I am a chicken person, live chicken though. And then I like fish

  • Branama  Kitchen  closes shop

    Branama Kitchen closes shop

    BARELY a year after gospel singer Kefee Obareki, now Kefee Don-Momoh, opened her restaurant dubbed the Branama Kitchen in Maryland, Mende, Lagos, the restaurant has closed shop.

    The news making the rounds is that the restaurant closed down because of lack of patronage. Other sources said the long absence of the gospel singer contributed to the winding down of the place since she was not physically around to monitor it.

    Kefee, we learnt, has been in the US for a while now to further her studies.

    Branama Kitchen which opened for business in April 2012 was named after the artiste hit single and album ‘Branama’.

  • Reni  Folawiyo’s  latest move

    Reni Folawiyo’s latest move

    RENI Folawiyo, an interior designer and better half of Tunde Folawiyo, has something new up her sleeves. The fashion buff is set to change the Lagos fashion with her new concept store, Alara. Alara, sources claim, will change the way Lagosians shop as major brands are already scrambling for space in the store. The store which is due for opening soon was designed by award-winning Architect David Adjaye, who runs a global practice spanning, London, New York and Johannesburg.