Tag: Actor

  • EMEKA IKE VISITS AILING ACTOR, TUNDE ALABI

    NOLLYWOOD Actor, Emeka Ike, on Tuesday, paid a visit to ailing actor, Tunde Alabi. He was accompanied by a colleague, Mr Victor Edogun and a Director, Paul Julius, and a few others.

    During his visit, Ike made monetary donation to Alabi while promising to do more.

    He also expressed his heartfelt gratitude to Nigerians who have made effort to keep Alabi alive.

    Recently, veteran actor, Chika Okpala, aka Chief Zebrudaya of the rested NTA drama, The New Masquerade, flew in from Enugu to pay a visit to the ailing actor. He came as a forerunner for an NGO that is interested in helping out.

    During his visit, Zebrudaya took stock of all that will be necessary Alabi’s rehabilitation after which he paid a courtesy visit to the Hospital social department and the Medical Director to thank them so far for the effort they have put in keeping him alive.

    Zebrudaya urged well-meaning Nigerians to send their donations to Tunde Obafemi Alabi’s Unity Bank account number, 0005647181.

  • WHY I WOULD LIKE TO MARRY AN ACTOR –KANNYWOOD ACTRESS RAHAMA SADAU

    WHY I WOULD LIKE TO MARRY AN ACTOR –KANNYWOOD ACTRESS RAHAMA SADAU

    Three years back, sultry Kannywood actress, Rahama Sadau, broke into the make-believe world and since then, there has been no stopping her. She plays the role of Binta, in EbonyLife TV’s sitcom, Sons of the Caliphate, which she says resonates with her personality.
    In this interview with OVWE MEDEME, the 23-year old thespian, who hails from Kaduna State, speaks about her decision to set up an all-girl production house, challenges she has surmounted, her latest project and other issues.

    HOW does it feel taking part in the Sons of the Caliphate?

    sahdu1It feels great. It’s like my dream is coming true. I’ve actually worked so hard for this and I’m so proud. I’m super excited today.

    So what does it mean to you, especially as you are being introduced to mainstream Nollywood?

    I have worked in several film productions in Nollywood but Sons of the Caliphate is a bit challenging because it was about 11 weeks of shoot, and I really enjoyed it. All the cast and crew were awesome. It is not something that is different from what we are doing. It’s just the change of language. Every other thing is the same; the production and everything.

    What were your most challenging moments during the shoot?

    Having me read my lines. It is not something that I do all the time. I’m more of the Hausa girl. So reading my lines was a bit challenging.

    Life of an actress up north, what is it like?

    It’s hard. It’s difficult but one just has to look in the way of positive things.

    How do you pull through?

    I put in a lot of focus, dedication and determination. And you just be yourself and avoid other things that will create problems or scandals for you, because you know, how the northern part is not the same like other places.

    What keeps you going in the light of all this?

    The fact that I come out to work every day and just do what I want to do is what keeps me going. And the love I’m receiving from fans, from friends and family is really motivating.

    Does the role you played in Sons of the Caliphate reflect in your life?

    Yes, a lot. The character, Binta, speaks more about me. It’s the centre of the story. You don’t get to see it earlier. But it speaks much about Rahama.

    Are you considering crossing over to mainstream Nollywood?

    I’ve already featured in several Nollywood productions, so it’s not like crossing over. It’s more about creating a balance between both industries because an actor is an actor, whether he acts in Bollywood, Russia or any other place.

    How would you compare Nollywood with the industry up north?

    Like I said, they are the same industries. The only challenges we have is that we have our own culture, norms and traditions that we can’t just go against. But everything is the same; the production, the set, and every other thing, including the story. You can actually turn Sons of the Caliphate from a northern story to an English one. You can tell from that.

    Do you see yourself as the kind of person who will want to change the northern culture?

    Well, we are born in this northern zone. You can’t say you will change culture. You just have to be careful with what you’re doing. And my own perception is that an actor is just an actor. It’s just like trying to portray an art for people to see. It has nothing to do with religion or anything of the sort. I’m just an actor.

    Why did you decide to go into acting?

    Let me just say I was born to be an actor. I’ve been dying to be an actor since when I was in secondary school. I participated in drama and clubs like that.

    When you decided to take it professional, did you meet any resistance from family?

    No. I came across a little difficulty because you know how the north is. Even to act in the northern zone is a problem because our people see it as something that isn’t normal. But today, I’m so proud. I’m like a role model to others and it’s fine. I’m okay with that.

    What did you study in school?

    I studied Business Administration at Kaduna State Polytechnic.

    Why aren’t you practicing your course of study?

    It was very difficult for me to balance school and acting because I actually joined the industry when I was in my second year. So it was difficult but I just had to do it.

    As a good looking woman, how do you handle the opposite sex?

    I’m just so dedicated and a hardworking that I don’t get to give attention to what you are talking about (laughs)

    Can you marry a fellow actor?

    Oh yes, so that he understands the job and he can allow me practice because if I marry someone who is not an actor, I would most likely have to stop acting. So I would like to marry an actor.

    Would you advise a typical northern girl to follow your footstep as a successful actress?

    Yes. I just recently launched my new production company and all of the crew members are female. It is deliberate because northern girls think they are women that are just kept aside. That can’t just make a move. We have talents; we have potentials in the North. But they are not given the opportunity to explode. And it’s not something bad. Just like I said, you can have restrictions. Being an actor doesn’t mean I would have to go nude to portray a character. That’s why I launched an all-girl production company. It is called Sadau Pictures.

    Are you married?

    No I’m not.

    Are you seeing someone?

    Oh my God. I’m just 23 (laughs). You can ask me these questions when I blow. For now, I’m just trying to act.

    When you decided to take acting as a career, how did your parents accept the decision?

    At first they were against it. But today, my mum is so proud. When she saw me on Super Story, she was like, that is my girl. So I have the support of my family and that is all I need.

    What would you say is one of the highpoints of your career?

    Working on set.

    Is there a particular production that is dearest to your heart?

    Sons of the Caliphate of course, because that’s the longest production I’ve been on in my career with 11 weeks of shoot. It was so challenging, amazing, and super fun. We just became family all of a sudden because we were stuck in one place. I love the story as well.

    If you were not an actress, what would you have been?

    I probably would have been a model.

    What is your major put off?

    That would be when I lack support.

    Who is your best friend?

    My mum, because she always calls me, telling me that she just finished cooking, asking me to come back home to eat, whether I’m abroad, or in Lagos. She doesn’t care. She’s always my comedy friend.

    How do you think a typical Hausa girl who wants to pursue her dreams can rise up against certain stereotypes?

    Well, you can tell when you watch Sons of the Caliphate because the story was trying to portray a Hausa girl who doesn’t want to go against the norms and traditions of the northerners. You can tell from that. She doesn’t do nasty things. She doesn’t do anything that is beyond what the people would say or against what the people would complain about.

    Talking about stereotypes, is it as bad as it is being painted about the girl child?

    No, it’s not actually. These days, people watch movies mostly on YouTube and we don’t have that internet popularity yet. We are still more on DVD. So what you’re watching are films of the 90s. People hardly get to see us the way we are now. We grew up and we moved on. We live the same lives as you do.

    Don’t you think your industry should begin to explore ways so they can measure up?

    Yes, I think we should but that would be up to the filmmakers and the producers.

  • BENIN CITY IS LIKE NEW HOLLYWOOD–NOLLYWOOD ACTOR EUGENE OBADAN

    From a young age, Eugene Obadan wanted to be in the movies. And now, with the release of Pandora, a movie of political intrigues, Obadan, a graduate of Business Administration from the Lead City University, Ibadan is living his dreams. In this interview with JOE AGBRO JR., the Edo State based actor, scriptwriter and movie producer talks about his ambition and other issues

    YOU studied Business Administration. How did you get into producing movies?

    Well, the first thing is, movies to me is a talent. I wrote the script, Pandora. The idea of Pandora came to me as a result of the current political and economic situation in the country, especially in terms of security. Movie is natural to me. I can sit down and create stories from my mind. I create different kinds of stories and I write them easily. All I need is an editor, that’s all. If I decide to imagine a story, give me five days, I would come up with a story. So, movies to me, is like a talent. I cannot just side-line it.

    When did you know that you had this talent?

    Well, it was when I was I think, 14 or thereabouts. I actually told my parents I wanted to be an actor but of course, you know the Nigerian factor. My mother wanted me to be a medical doctor, my father said I would be good in business. Actually, my father said I was better in business, so I studied business administration. But movies, acting and scriptwriting has always been a part of me.

    Is Pandora your first work?

    Yes, Pandora is my first major work. But actually, I have written other scripts which are still in the pipeline. But I decided to do Pandora because of the love for the story and the present situation in the country. Pandora is about emotional blackmail. It’s a presidential movie in the sense that we have a president who actually wanted to do good for his people. He wanted to be a good president but forces around him which he never knew like the vice-president in the movie, was his best friend but the vice-president wanted that seat and never liked his policies.

    The vice-president wanted the old factor that caused deprivation, poverty, and depression amongst the people. So, the movie tells us of how the vice president was able to use emotional blackmail, that is, like kidnapping the president’s daughter and destabilising the presidency in other to obtain power. So, it tells us another side of politics which people don’t really see. How politicians can actually use emotional blackmail, assassination and even all sorts of means to get power aside the normal elections. So Pandora shows us these intrigues and also the quest for power and what it leads to – embezzlement, greed and so on and so forth. (It is about) how people in government can actually manipulate the affairs of state for their interests in order to topple government.

    When you talk about mixing emotional blackmail with politics, that is like the power play that goes on in politics all over the world. When you were writing the movie, did you have any country in mind?

    Now, you’re asking me a very technical question. Well, definitely Nigeria has always been a case study for many things. So, if we’re talking about a country, I didn’t need to look too far for my research. You can see it all around.

    For someone doing this for the first time, how did it all go?

    Well, the whole thing taught me a big lesson. Number one, to respect Nigerian movie producers more because it’s not easy. Especially the ones that are really involved in the production. I’m not talking of the ones that pay the money and say, ‘Oya, go and do what you like.’ I’m talking of the one that follows the sequence. It is a very Herculean task. You cannot override the fact that you will meet a lot of people. First of all, my first challenge was, in Benin City, I gathered a group of people for props.

    Now, this same group, because I did not get a particular lens for the camera. We used a Black Magic camera. It’s a cinematography camera. It’s one of the best in the industry. But because I was still coming in the business, I did not get the batteries on time, so in the quest of looking for them, I missed a day. And these people connived and said they were no longer going to be a part of the production. I had paid them. They took my money and they said they were not going to be involved. In my frustration, I called a lot of people to prevail on them.

    Even the Nigerian Police prevailed on them, to please, ‘they should work with me.’ They refused, thinking that the project was going to be frustrated without their involvement. The shocking part was that I was even willing to sacrifice more into their funds and they refused. So, in that frustration and in that sort of pain, I had to speak with my director who now got in touch with some of his other colleagues from different parts – Port Harcourt, Lagos and environs, to come and help out. That means, making me pay extra. What I have paid before, I didn’t get it because I couldn’t be fighting those people while I had a project that needs to be done.

    I had to pay external people again before we now started the project. And to God be the glory, we started and we finished. And today, I’m  glad because many people told me, especially those people, they told me it would not work. But I’m glad that the picture was successful. We had stars like Alex Osifo, Segun Arinze – they did a perfect job. They were with me all through the time. Even Alex Osifo helped by involving one or two people – the political clout – to assist us in terms of getting a vehicle and all that. At the end of the day, it was a success. Since it was my company, Eugene Entertainment Network, funding it alone, it was very Herculean.

    You funding this project, how much did it cost you?

    It’s a lot of money my brother. We thank God. Before I did the project, I’ve been involved in other things. I’m also into real estate. There was no help from anywhere, I’ll be frank with you. The only help I got was thanks to one of my neighbour in the house. Instead of an hotel, we used my neighbour’s house because he just moved. We used his house as a place for the actors and actresses and set people for all of them to lodge. So, that helped in a long way. The airport in Benin assisted us, even though we paid, the assistance was more than the money. Thanks to UBTH Golf Course where we also used the Golf Club without collecting a dime.

    Nollywood is very competitive. How do you feel about putting your movie there?

    Well, I had this dream of being an actor, I had the dream of doing movies. And thank God it’s coming to pass. And I believe since I did not compete with anybody to do this movie, it was my own thing. So, I believe if your product is good, people would buy. I had a story and I believe it’s a beautiful story. To the memory of my father, he was the first person. He’s late now – Augustus Obadan. He was the one who actually encouraged me. He was the first person who edited this script. And he has always told me to go for it. Before he died, he asked several times when I was going to do it. Unfortunately, he’s not here. I know, his spirit being with us, it’s going to sail forth.

    You’re based in Benin. How would you describe the movie industry in Benin?

    Good enough, I once worked in Kada Plaza where we have the biggest cinema in Benin. When I was there, what I saw was what even encouraged me the more because there is this new culture on Sunday that everybody in Benin would love to go to the cinema with their family to go and watch a movie.

    And you can ask from Desmond Elliot, Lancelot Imasuen, Benin has become the new haven for movies. I don’t know whether it was my movie that sparked that up. I don’t know whether it was there before me. but what I witnessed during my production was like about four movie companies were actually doing movies in Benin, which I know was not happening before. I want to believe it was part of my bringing in Segun Arinze and Alex Osifo to Benin that has cranked up this new awareness to Benin City.

    I know Iyore was shot in Benin and movies like Invasion was shot in Benin. So, Benin is now like the new Hollywood in Nigeria. But in terms of distribution and sales, you cannot rule out the giant, which is Lagos. That’s why I’m in Lagos and I’ve been speaking with FilmOne Distribution. I hope they read this paper so that they would work with me to ensure that this film is properly distributed in the cinemas. Because, like I said, we used Black Magic and Black Magic is a cinematographic camera that they use to do cinema movies.

    Did you also act in the movie?

    Yes, I did. I played the role of Nicholas. Nicholas was the one who rescued the president’s daughter. He’s a character that would put everybody in suspense because first of all, you’ll want to know, where did this guy come from? He was part of the Black Disciple Organisation that kidnapped the president’s daughter and as a member, he understood them.

    How long did it take to produce the movie?

    Right now, it’s still under editing. I’d scripted this movie about three years ago. First of all, I had to get all the equipment, the camera, lights and everything because I discovered through my director that there is no way we can pay every day for these things if we have to do it well, because it would cause almost the same thing purchasing them. So, we had to take our time to buy some of the best equipment.

    So you actually bought those equipment?

    Yes, I have them. And I’m putting them up for rent. I’ll still be using them. Definitely, this is not going to be my only movie. My prayer is for sponsors, good Nigerians, and those who are giving loans and grants, to look into our case and into my movie.

    What is the next thing for you now?

    I have a lot in stock and I’m writing more. But first of all, we must see the success of this one. I must be properly encouraged and properly motivated to bring out more stories.

  • Jackie Chan to get lifetime achievement Oscar

    Jackie Chan to get lifetime achievement Oscar

    Martial arts expert and actor Jackie Chan will receive a lifetime achievement Oscar, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced on Thursday.

    The 62-year-old, Hong Kong-born star of Hollywood movies such as “Kung Fu Panda,” “The Karate Kid” and the “Rush Hour” franchise would receive the 2016 Governors Awards alongside other recipients.

    They include Documentary maker Frederick Wiseman, British film editor Anne V. Coates, and casting director Lynn Stalmaster.

    Each would get an honorary Oscar statuette recognising their lifetime contribution to film at a gala in Los Angeles in November.

    Academy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs in a statement called them all “true pioneers and legends in their crafts.”

    Chan made his movie debut at the age of 8, and has acted and sometimes written and directed more than 30 martial arts movies in Hong Kong. He has never won an Oscar.

    In August, he was ranked the second-highest paid actor in the world by Forbes with estimated 2016 earnings of $61 million, just below “Fast and Furious” star Dwayne Johnson.

  • Popular Nollywood actor adopts barbing, hairdressing as a means of livelihood

    Popular Nollywood actor adopts barbing, hairdressing as a means of livelihood

    Owolabi Ibrahim is an actor many lovers of Yoruba movies are never tired of watching. Since his debut movie, Elepo Lo Lere, he has wowed his fans with A-list performances that peaked in Igboya, a film produced by Bimbo Oshin wherein he acted as Oshin’s husband.

    A fact that is lost on many of Owolabi’s admirers is that he doubles as a barber; a vocation he practices till date. As a matter of fact, he would rather have himself addressed as a barber than an actor.

    “Of course, I am a barber, he said proudly in a chat with our correspondent in his exotic office in Ebute-Meta, Lagos. “That is what I was before any other thing.

    “I know that you know me as an actor. The truth, however, is that it was my being a barber that led me to becoming an actor.”

    Hearing him talk about his rise from the nadir of poverty to creating employment for many would evoke the emotions of even the hard-hearted. As the son of a poor tailor, Owolabi started out life on a very rough patch. Even before he wrote his last paper in the secondary school, the young man knew that it would take a miracle to further his education.

    Explaining his predicament, Owolabi said: “It was by the grace of God that I finished secondary school. Even before I finished, I knew there was no way I would further my education.

    “I came from a very poor background. And when I say poor, I mean poor in the crudest sense of the word. We didn’t even know when or where the next meal would come from. I tell people that there is a difference between being poor and being wretched. My dad was not just poor, he was wretched.

    “Believe me, I cannot recollect any day we had three square meals on a particular day. But after secondary school, I realised that I had the talent to make hair. At the time, we used blade and comb to cut hair. People around me would always come to me to help cut their hair, and I kept improving every day.

    “As a teenager, it was a difficult period for anybody to be hungry. But that was what I experienced most times. You know, it would take God’s grace for a hungry man not to eat his enemy’s food. That was what I had.

    “The Yoruba say the child of a cloth seller should not wear rags. But my father was a tailor and we wore rags.”

    Owolabi also realised that he needed to know how to make hair for women. Fortunately for him, an old woman who lived in the same compound where his parents lived was an expert weaver. So, every day, Owolabi would sit and watch the woman.

    “At that time, I was not really cutting hair for money. People just gave me whatever they had and I was happy that I was making something for myself. But at a point, I decided that I needed to also know how to make women’s hair.

    “And luckily for me, there was a woman who lived in the same house with us. I would wake up and sit down beside her as she made hair.

    “One day, after I had watched her very well, I called one of my younger sisters and sat her down. After a few trials, I realised that I have mastered the art of making women’s hair. From that point, I knew I wanted to be a barber.”

    But the young man’s dream was almost truncated even before it took shape. His father wanted him to join him in his tailoring business. Faced with a choice between obeying his father and following his dream to become a barber, Owolabi opted for the latter.

    Recalling the experience, he said: “It was a tough period for me. I had to decide on what I wanted for myself because each time I remembered the economic hardship we were facing at home, I told myself that I didn’t want to be a tailor.

    “I was always confused that my father was a tailor and he could not meet the needs of his family, yet he wanted me to become a tailor too. His life was not inspiring to me each time I looked at him. As a tailor, he could not feed or clothe his family. So, I decided to disobey him and follow my dream.”

    In order to follow his dream, Owolabi had to leave home to fend for himself. Incidentally, a US-based Nigerian came and decided to set up a modern barbing salon. At the time, the salon, Choices Barbing Salon, located a stone’s throw from the popular Yaba Bus Stop, was the best around and truly the choice place to have a hair cut in the whole of Lagos. You were not a big boy if you had not visited Choices.

    But for young Owolabi, the use of modern barbing tools was strange. In place of the modern clippers, Owolabi was only ardent in the use of comb and blade.

    “Let me confess to you,” he said, “my story has really firmed up my belief in destiny. While I was struggling to convince myself that I had to go ahead with my dream, a Nigerian who was based in the US came back home and decided to set up a barbing salon.

    “While he was searching for the people to work for him, somebody mentioned my name and I was invited. When I got there, he said he had been told that I was a good barber and asked if I knew how to use the clipper. Confused about what to say, I simply said yes, though I had never seen an electric clipper, much less handling it at the time. There and then, I was asked to cut hair for a young boy.”

    For him, it was a test of a life time; one that that would make or mar his future. Surprisingly, Owolabi handled the task masterfully and secured his future.

    “You know, while the little boy was being prepared, I watched how others who worked there handled the clippers. The truth is that I am a fast learner. So, within the few minutes that I watched them, I was able to master how to handle the clipper. By the time I finished cutting the boy’s hair, everybody around liked my work and I was employed immediately,” Owolabi said with a sense of fulfillment.

    After years of service at Choices, Owolabi decided it was time for him to move on. Although he was not fully prepared for the move, he made up his mind to leave. He decided to team up with a colleague to start a salon on the balcony of their home.

    “My decision to leave at the time was not one that I wished for, but I had to move on even when I was not sure what the future had in stock for me. Fortunately for me, one of my friends and colleague also decided to join me. We started from the balcony of our home.

    “But the interesting thing was that all the big men who knew us decided to follow us. They decided to forego the comfort of the former place and opted to come to us in the open under the sun. That was the beginning of the story of what you are seeing today.

    “Today, whenever I remember that story, I just marvel and praise God for His mercies over my life.

    “Like I told you, mine is a story that sounds like a fairytale, even to me. It was simply the grace of God that made it possible. Imagine people giving up the comfort of the former salon and coming to us.

    “More confounding was that they would pay me about 10 times what they were supposed to pay.”

    In 1994, Owolabi, having saved enough money, decided to set up a truly modern barbing salon on the old Yaba Road in Lagos. Twenty-two years on, Owolabi’s beauty salon has grown in leaps and bounds and has become something of a brand.

    Although he declined the reporter’s request for the identities of his clients, Owolabi boasted that it is a list of who-is-who in the country. He told our reporter that he often flies from Lagos to Port Harcourt and Abuja to attend to barbing needs of his clients.

    “I value all the people that patronise me. It is not about the amount of money they pay. I travel to Port Harcourt and Abuja by air to barb hair for my clients,” he said.

    With the experience of his father always on his mind and growing up in an improvised room that served as both a shop for the father’s tailoring business and a living room for the family, Owolabi decided to make the old man happy by building a house for him.

    “My joy today is that God has used me to put smiles on the face of my father. I had to make his need for a house a priority over mine. As I speak with you, he lives in a very comfortable house I built for him,” Owolabi said smiling.

    With his wife and children based in the UK and a thriving business, many would see Owolabi as an accomplished individual. But he sees himself differently. “I don’t think I have anything yet. I continue to work hard every day, hoping that the next day would be better.”

    Asked what drives him, the man who fondly describes himself as barber said the fear of being poor drives him to work harder every day.

    He said: “I grew up in a very poor environment. When you are poor, there is the possibility that you may one day become rich. But when you are wretched, it would take the grace of God for you to make it. It is by the grace of God that I have attained this position. So, I simply cannot afford to be poor again. It is that fear that drives me.

    “It would be very foolish of anybody to say that he has arrived. I have not made any money yet. Each time I speak with my staff, I try to use my life story, but I see in their eyes that they don’t believe me. We shared the same room with big rats.”

    Owolabi’s success with barbing laid the foundation for his movie career. He was first invited to appear in a movie as a guest artiste. The late prolific movie producer, Alade Aromire, who at the time was Owolabi’s client, was the first person to feature him in a movie.

    While he has featured in more than 50 movies and earned himself a place on the list of good actors, Owolabi insists he is a barber.

    “My main job is barbing. It was on this job that I was invited as a guest artiste. Most of the actors and actresses are my clients. Most of them made their hair in our salon,” he said.

    Of all the movies he has starred in, he singled out Igboya as his best and most memorable.

    “When I say I believe so much in destiny, this is one of the reasons. I was not originally the person cast for that role. But one way or the other, the person was not available and Bimbo Oshin decided to give me the role.”

    Asked to take a look at his story from where he started and his present position, Owolabi looked up and summed it up in one word: unbelievable.

  • Yoruba actor dies

    Yoruba actor dies

    After reportedly suffering a mild fever, Yoruba actor Abdul-Lateef Titilope Ashimiyu died on Saturday. The actor was largely known for his role as an Islamic cleric in many movies.

    His body was slated for internment yesterday at his family house in Agunpopo, Oyo State.

    This tragedy is coming barely a fortnight after the passing of Henrietta Kosoko, Jide Kosoko’s wife, who died after battling diabetes.

  •  Rivers’ stories yet to be told, says actor

     Rivers’ stories yet to be told, says actor

    Rivers State-born Nollywood actor Walter Anga, in this interview with Precious Dikewoha in Port Harcourt, spoke on his journey into the industry, his relationship with ex-militant leader, copping with female fans and many more.

    Since your acting career takes you from one place to another, how do you cope taking care of your home and that of the scene?

    I’m married to a very understanding woman that understands my kind of business. She got married to me while I was in the business and she knows that I am one person that when I am giving something to do I will do it better. She knows that I’m an extremist when it comes to that; of course, she has lived with me for more than seven years.   She doesn’t have problem with female fans, I can tell you that the desperation of female fans doesn’t give her headache.  As an actor if you don’t have female fans then you are not doing well in the industry.  I can tell you that 95 per cent of fan base have to be women, so my wife does not have problem with female fans.

    Have you ever been embarrassed by your fans in public 

    Yes it has happened, but I don’t call it an embarrassment I called it overwhelmed. There is this film I acted when I betrayed Francis Duru. Someone saw me at  Conoil filling station close to  Amadi roundabout in Port Harcourt and pointed at me and said: ‘You are wicked for betraying your friend’. She was seriously shouting at me before one of the pump attendants came out and advised her to take it easy with me.

    What was the role that brought you to limelight?

    While I was in school, I did my first movie called Labista.  That was in December 2003 and after that movie, I was invited by my director, Ifeanyi Onyabor  to Enugu with other friends but there was no time to partake in that movie. I played two roles in Labista and after that movie each time I pass by people will look at me and said Labista. After that one, I played another role in a movie called New Jerusalem as Kudo and everybody identified me with that movie. To be frank, New Jerusalem made me popular and I was impressed.

    From the time you started acting and today could you say there is a difference?

    A very big difference, I used to tell people that there is a very big change.   Like I  told somebody that  I cannot watch the movies I acted in 2002 and 2006 because I was still being  groomed. You cannot compare those movies with the ones I acted in 2013, 2014 till date.

    How do you assess the industry and what are the challenges

    It is not easy, I know the marketers and the stakeholders are doing their best for us to get to the right destination.   But the only problem we have is technology, we don’t have good equipment. In America everybody wants to shoot with red camera and to get a red camera to shoot here will cost you N200, 000 daily. Then you will now ask how much will the marketer make in that film. The government is trying but most time we don’t know where the money budgeted for this industry goes to. When you talk about movie making in Africa we are the best, all we need is government’s support.

    What are you doing to carry up and coming actor along and guide them right?  

    To guide up and coming artiste is a very big problem in Rivers State. Many of the up and coming artiste go the wrong channel and making themselves victims of those who take advantage of their desperation. The Actors Guild of Nigeria, Rivers State chapter has on several occasions warned them not to give money to anybody in the name of acting film. Sometimes people call me that they want to pay money and I will rebuke them that they don’t have to give money to go to audition. Acting has no short –cut; you have to be into acting to be acting. Desperation has led many ladies to go to bed with many fake directors and actors.

    You are a friend to Ateke Tom, the ex-militant leader, what brought you so close to him?     

    High Chief Ateke Tom is not just a friend; he is my elder brother and father. I prefer to call him Edagbe, which means my father.  I am from the same environment with him. I met him in 2005. Somebody from my kindred told me that they were watching a film together with Ateke when he saw me and said ‘I heard that this guy is from Okrika, please go and bring him for me’. And then the whole town was in crisis and my parents never wanted me to come to Port Harcourt, not to talk of visiting Ateke of all people then. I was in Enugu then but I said to myself ‘I will go and visit him’ and I went to his house with two of my friends, Kio London and Ofiafulagu Mbaka. While we were waiting for Ateke we were afraid but when he finally came out, we saw a different person. We saw a humble man willing to assist the society, we saw charisma in display and we saw a harmless man. After enjoying the drinks he offered us, he asked us what we want him to do for us. Then we replied: ‘we want to do a movie of our own’.  He immediately asked us to call him three weeks after.  He gave us his number and big money. I went to my father direct to inform him about his magnanimity. But before the three weeks he gave us could expire the military raided Okrika, which scattered the opportunity for us to meet him. In fact, the military killed my dream. I was very angry with the government of the day because that was the first time somebody volunteered to assist me and the government aborted the dream. Though later he sponsored my first trip to America where I did a course on dredging   and he also took care of everything.  Till date he has been a father not just me but for all the entertainers in this part of the country.  Each time I come around I try as much as possible to see him. He is one of the simplest men in this country, his motto is that ‘don’t find my trouble, I will not find your trouble’.   Ateke has showed me that the best investment any one can invest is in human being.

    What are your colleagues from Rivers State doing to harness the untapped stories in Rivers and Southsouth?  

    Rivers State is where we are supposed to be doing good movie; the best actors in the industry today were groomed   in this state. They include Francis Duru, Charles Nnojie, Rita Dominic, Monalisa Chinda, Charles Okafor, Bob-Manual Udogwu, Ejike Asiegbu, Yul  Edochie and others were groomed  from UNIPORT. Till date we are still grooming people. We have stories untouched; in Rivers State we have Amayanagbo, Amadanagbo, Gbenemene and Obi. Yet when the Whiteman sees you he will say ‘Igwe…eeee’ because that is what is been portrayed in our movie. When I am playing the role of  a prince in a movie, I am playing a prince of Igbo land. So, it is time for someone played prince of Amayanagbo so that the person will learn about our culture, like we are learning their culture by acting the role of Igbo man’s prince. We have over 30 good stories of true Rivers man, but they are untapped. I believe that the government of Chief Nyesom Wike through the commissioner for culture will make a difference and see reason to give us a chance through their support to tap the opportunities in Rivers State.

  • Actor Jelili appointed SA to Kwara Gov

    Actor Jelili appointed SA to Kwara Gov

    Hollywood actor Femi Adebayo has been appointed Special Assistant on Arts, Culture and Tourism to the Governor of Kwara State, Abdulfatah Ahmed.

    The versatile actor who played Jelili in the comic Yoruba flick of the same title was announced for the new position on Monday.

    Sharing the good news, the 43-year-old Law graduate wrote on Instagram: ”Today i was appointed as Special Assistant (SA) to the Kwara State Governor, on Arts, Culture and Tourism. Thank God 4 an opportunity 2 transform my state into a foremost tourist state that will attract foreign and domestic tourists. My fans i need ur support. Leave me not.”

    Femi is the son of veteran actor Adebayo Salami, aka Oga Bello.

    An award-winning actor, Femi made his first cross-over role, playing Banji in Kunle Afolayan’s movie, October 1.

    Recall that actors Ini Edo and Kate Henshaw were recently appointed into similar positions in their home states: Edo is Special Adviser on Tourism in Akwa Ibom State to Governor Emmanuel Udoh of Akwa Ibom, while Henshaw is Special Adviser, Liason, Lagos to Cross Rivers State governor, Prof. Ben Ayade.

  • Three Nigerians to star in BET’s Top Actor Africa

    Three Nigerians to star in BET’s Top Actor Africa

    With March 1, 2016 fixed for the Season 2 of Black Entertainment (BET)’s Top Actor Africa reality show, three Nigerian actors, cast for the show, will no doubt endear more fans to the show in this part of the world. They include Ifianyi Dike, Tobechi Nneji and Uriel Oputa.

    The three are expected to fly the flag of Nigeria as they make a dramatic Season 2 debut in the show which kicks off on BET DSTV Channel 129, next month.

    The Nigerians join nine other hopefuls from South, East and West Africa, who were shortlisted after gruelling auditions held in Johannesburg, Durban, Lagos and Nairobi.  They include South Africa’s Shamilla Miller andSimhle Belinda Plaatjies from Cape Town, Farrell Drew from Durban, Marilyn Sekgapane, Jesse Suntele, Hendrik Lombard and Sabelo Sibeko from Johannesburg, as well as Lorreine Wangui Gakuo and Alex Khayo from Kenya.

    Organisers say Top Actor Africa will be testing the actors to the limits in nine gruelling acting challenges, taking them through every acting genre from Improv to Comedy, Theatre, Soapie, Commercial, Romance, Horror, Drama and Action.  They will have the unique opportunity to work with industry insiders from the local industry and Hollywood including celebrity actors, casting agents, directors, producers, managers and writers as they fight to stay in the competition and keep their acting dreams alive.

    The contestants will be competing for the chance to win the title of ‘Top Actor Africa.’  At stake is a career-launching prize package that includes US$10,000 in cash, a one-year contract with international representation and access to Hollywood auditions.

    Commenting on the emergence of the final contestants, Alex Okosi, Senior Vice President and Managing Director, VIMN Africa, said: ”We send our congratulations and best wishes to all the contestants who have made the final cut in Top Actor Africa.   We are thrilled to have developed this powerful and proven platform for discovering and empowering African acting talent, and we look forward to seeing the drama unfold in season 2.”

    On her selection, Oputa said “Finding out I made it to Top Actor Africa was pure excitement, it has come at a real good time for me and my spirit is lifted, sincerely I’m truly overjoyed. I believe I’m going to just shine in the house.”

    Hosted by South African movie star Zikhona Sodlaka (‘Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom’ and ‘Generations’), the 2015 contest was won by South African drama student Altovise Lawrence, who now hosts entertainment news show, BET Buzz.  She also recently shot her first Hollywood movie, ‘The Other Side’ in the USA opposite Roger Guenvuer Smith, Brad James and Erica Hubbard. The film is due for theatrical release in 2016.

  • FRIEND NARRATES  ORDEAL OF ACTOR  HIT BY BULLET

    FRIEND NARRATES ORDEAL OF ACTOR HIT BY BULLET

    THERE are indications that Nollywood actor, Charles ‘IgweTupac’ Okocha who was hit by a stray bullet at a traditional wedding in Uruagwu, Nnewi, Anambra state on December 27, 2015 is responding to treatment, but his friend, simply called Okoye, has narrated the drama that took place in their effort to save the actor from dying.

    The actor was wallowing in pains unattended to in spite of a crowd of onlookers until a friend of his rushed him to the Nnamdi Azikiwe Teaching Hospital.

    Okoye decried the kind of treatment the ailing actor received at the Nnamdi Azikiwe Teaching Hospital where he was rushed to, following reluctance shown by onlookers at the scene of the incident.

    Okoye said: “At the hospital, the conduct of the doctors and nurses was so annoying. The other people who helped to bring the actor to the hospital got angry and started shouting at the medical personnel. I told my friends that making trouble or even shouting at them could make our friend Charles Okocha die unattended to. I had to beg the nurses and all that. They were just telling us, ‘Go here, go there, sign for this, sign for that.’ I was obediently doing everything faster than expected.” He went on to say, “It was over two hours before the doctor who was to perform the surgery arrived . . . .”

    He disclosed that even after the bottle necks and eventual treatment of Okocha, the actor was still in danger, as his intestines suddenly popped out when the external stitches were removed.

    “He was sitting down when we heard a sound like that of a burst balloon. Behold, everything in Okocha’s stomach came out. . . . The nurses rushed over, looked at him and ran away . . . But Okocha was courageous enough to hold in his intestines from dropping to the ground. . . . The doctor later returned to close the actor’s stomach. When we asked about the cause of the mishap, the doctor responded that they used ‘nylon one’ for the stitches, as they did not have ‘nylon three’ on hand. Luckily, the actor is responding to treatment,” he explained.