Tag: Nollywood

  • Amaka Igwe is not dead,  says Charles Novia

    Amaka Igwe is not dead, says Charles Novia

    TOP Nollywood filmmaker, Charles Novia, has described as ‘needless’ the tears being shed for the late filmmaker and director, Amaka Igwe, by her fans and admirers.

    In his tribute, he said Amaka Igwe did not die; rather, she just “built her loving House of Commotion in our hearts, commotion with co-relation and commotion with emotions.”

    He further said: “If there was no Checkmate, the superb soap opera that had a chart-topping five-year run on national television, there would have been no Nollywood. This is because the tested and trusted actors from Checkmate were mostly cast in the trend-setting Living in Bondage.”

    Her contributions to the creative industry, he added, cannot be quantified because she “was an advocate for professionalism”.

    “Amaka is not dead. With enduring works such as Violated (which re-defined and triggered the romantic drama genre in Nollywood), Rattlesnake, To live again, Forever and Fuji House of Commotion, how could she be dead? This lady who has been the subject of various dissertations and academic theses changed our creative landscape,” he added.

  • Another Film industry icon passes on

    Barely forty eight hours after the demise of one of the most important women filmmakers in Africa, Amaka Igwe, the industry has also lost an icon – Akin Oni (Sparks). While
    Amaka clearly excelled in the artistic prowess of script writing, producing and directing, Akin Oni was an electrical gaffer who worked with greats like Dr Ola Balogun, Hubert Ogunde, Al Fox, Mederois, Ade Afolayan (Ade Love), John Williamson (Niger Films) and was electrical gaffer on most of the, early films of the 20th century. Akin Oni, aged 81 passed on this evening at his 22 Mcneil residence in Lagos as announced by his son, Biodun Oni, a sound recordist in the Nigerian film industry. Akin Oni will be remembered for his service to the industry and training most of the prominent lighting technicians currently serving in the Nigerian film industry today. Maytheir souls rest in peace.

  • PHOTOS: Life and times of Amaka Igwe (1963-2014)

    PHOTOS: Life and times of Amaka Igwe (1963-2014)

  • Nollywood icon Amaka Igwe is dead

    Nollywood icon Amaka Igwe is dead

    Nigerian film-maker and Nollywood icon Amaka Igwe is dead.

    Igwe, 51 died on Tuesday in Enugu where she had gone, in company of her husband, for pre-production preparations for a new Igbo soap.

    She reportedly suffered an asthma attack and was immediately rushed to the hospital after initial interventions had failed. She passed on before getting to the hospital.

    Mrs Igwe is survived by her husband of 21 years Charles Igwe, three children, an aged mother, siblings and a large extended family.
    Born Amaka Isaac-Ene, the deceased was an accomplished writer, producer, director, entrepreneur and teacher.

    She is the founder of BoBTV Expo, founder and CEO of Top Radio 90.9FM, Amaka Igwe Studios, and the newly-launched Q Entertainment Networks.

    A visionary and pioneer of modern Nigerian TV drama and film, she hit national limelight as the writer and producer of award-winning TV soap ‘Checkmate’ and its off shoot ‘Fuji House of Commotion’.

    Her Nollywood projects include RattleSnake and Violated – two critically-acclaimed movies that set apart Amaka Igwe Studios in the much-criticised Nollywood industry.

    Amaka Igwe studied Education/Religion at the University of Ife (Now Obafemi Awolowo University). She had a Master’s Degree from the University of Ibadan. She had her early education at All Saints School (Now Trans Ekulu Primary School), Girls High School Awkunanaw, Enugu and Idia College, Benin.

    She worked as a lecturer at the Anambra State University of Technology and briefly in oil and Gas, before settling for the motion picture industry.

  • Honour for Clarion Chukwura

    Honour for Clarion Chukwura

    IT was a night of fun and glamour recently when one of Nigeria’s top Nollywood actresses, Clarion Chukwurah, was honoured by Prince of Anthony Hotel, a member of 1960 Group, in Lagos.

    Chukwura, who started out as a kid actress in 1979, has featured in over 85 movies, winning several awards of excellence.

    In his tribute, the General Manager of Prince of Anthony, Gbemi Sijuwade, said: “The Hotel 1960 Group thought it fit to honour Clarion Chukwurah because she has carved a niche for herself in the industry and it is only worthwhile for us to celebrate her. We look forward to celebrating more stars in the nearest future.

    “Clarion is very admirable and is passionate about her job. She is a towering figure in the industry and an icon to reckon with. As part of the hotel’s tribute to her, the management will have her portrait placed in the hotel’s hall of fame.”

    The event was witnessed by number of her colleagues in the make-believe world who literally poured encomiums on her on the occasion. In his tribute, veteran actor, Jibola Dabo, described her as a very good friend and colleague. “Clarion is a colleague and personal friend of over 10 years. I feel really good and appreciate the organisers of this event. She really needs to be celebrated. She is a role model to many in the industry. She is not only an actress, but a musician; she has really done well for herself. For those of us who know her very well and who are her colleagues, we know the quality of her jobs.”

    Also, Nollywood actress, Toyin Alausa, said: “The organisers have done a very good job, I must say. This is a very good initiative and I will urge others to try and emulate what they have done. If individuals and groups like the Prince of Anthony Hotel can come together to play host to veterans like Clarion, I think it will be good for the industry”.

    The respected actress lauded the organisers for the gesture. She said: “I am very elated because the Prince of Anthony Hotel thought it wise to put this together to host me ahead of my 35 years on stage, the celebration of my birthday and the launch of my book. It is quite gladdening and I am continuously overwhelmed to know that people love me so much. A lot of organisations are planning to do pre-hosting for me ahead of the main event, which comes later in the year. But I must say that the Prince of Anthony Hotel has taken the lead ahead of everybody else. I am happy.”

    She further gave reasons why she took a break from acting. According to her, “I was away for two years. It is important for an artiste, no matter what you are doing, to take a time off to do other things, gather new experiences, upgrade yourself in training, so as to build a new store with which to re-invent yourself. So, that is what I have done.”

  • Danny Glover charts path for African cinema

    Danny Glover charts path for African cinema

    •Joins AFA Board

    DANNY Glover, an award-winning Hollywood actor, has said that collaborating with other professionals in other big markets in the US, North America and South America is the only way motion picture professionals in Africa can maximize their talents for social and economic relevance.

    The Hollywood actor said this in Lagos last weekend at an event to mark the public presentation of the10th anniversary commemorative book capturing the first decade of the pan-African awards titled: From Dream to Reality: The AMAA Legacy, at the Oriental Hotel, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    At the event graced by billionaire businessman, Chief Sunny Odogwu, and Nollywood practitioners, Glover said after 10 years of AMAA, it is now time for film makers and professionals in the industry to collaborate with their counterparts in America, North America and South America to create a huge creative economy that will bring good monetary returns for them.

    “To start with, I am leading a global effort to raise funding for film projects with AFA. We want to start with two major films that will tell the real story of Africans and those of us in the Diaspora. What this project will do for us is that we will be tapping into the huge market in these regions of the world, where we have large black population. Our actors, actresses and other people who will work on these projects will have cross-continental and global exposures working with their counterparts from these countries. We will have access to a global distribution network that will guarantee revenue and good returns. I was part of this dream 10 years ago. I have stayed with it since inception. Going into the next 10 years, I will hold Peace’s hand and work with her to realize the objectives of making black film makers and professionals anywhere in the world relevant,” he said.

    Announcing Glover’s new status as the Chairman of AFA governing Board, the AMAA Chief Executive, Peace Anyiam-Osigwe, said the Board was pleased to have the global film icon as its chairman, adding that Glover is expected to bring to the organization his extensive experience in the business of film making, talent development and international reach. As he said, we will soon start with two major international film projects. Two scripts that tell the story of Black Africans and those in the Diaspora will be selected. Our film makers and writers will be able to submit their synopses and profiles whether as actors, actresses, directors and any other professional in the industry to a website that will soon be unveiled for the projects. The deadline for submission of scripts and profiles will be October 31. Members of the cast and crew for the film projects will be selected from the entries we get,” she said.

  • Dr Sid makes Nollywood debut

    Dr Sid makes Nollywood debut

    JUST like Davido, Omawumi and other Nigerian top singers, Dr Sid has also made his debut appearance in a Nollywood movie, The Last 3 Digits, a development that many see as an attempt at stepping into his late father’s shoes.

    The movie also stars actor and Glo ambassador, Nonso Diobi.

    Moses Ewang, the director of the movie, said: “In 2008, Justus Esiri gave me a wonderful performance in the film, Chase. Six years later, his son, Dr Sid, has stepped into his father’s shoes and blown me away with this amazing performance in The Last Three Digits, where he played alongside talented actor, Nonso Diobi!”

    Born Sidney Onoriode Esiri, he is a singer-songwriter and dentist, who hails from Delta State, but was raised in Lagos. His mother is a successful fashion designer. His late father, a Member of the Order of the Niger (MON), was famous for his role as the Village Headmaster, a Nigerian sitcom popular in the 1980s.

    Dr Sid, who is the second child of four children, has had his mind set on becoming an entertainer from his childhood. However, his life took a different course after he graduated from the Nigerian Air Force Secondary School, Ikeja, Lagos. He attended the University of Ibadan (UI), Oyo State, where he studied Dental Surgery. He first worked at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Idi-Araba, and later did his national youth service in Yola, Adamawa State. He also worked at various dental clinics, while also playing music.

    Three years after, he resolved to quit his practice as a dentist, so he could concentrate fully on his music career. He signed on to Don Jazzy’s Mo’ Hits Records, where he recorded the Mo’ Hits All stars album, Curriculum Vitae, (CV), which was released in December, 2007. He featured on seven of the 15 tracks released on the album, which included Booty Call and Close to You.

  • Project ACT-Nollywood: N150m frittered?

    Project ACT-Nollywood: N150m frittered?

    I am worried that out of the N3 billion Federal Government grant under the Project Act Nollywood scheme, N150 million may have just been frittered away.

    This money, which was earmarked for Nollywood capacity building, was spent on 23 people, who are considered to be members of the Directors Guild of Nigeria (DGN), for a supposed training at the University of Colorado, United States.

    While I am not against capacity building for Nollywood, I am troubled by the composition of the beneficiaries and the modality of choosing these people, most of whom are ‘expired’ filmmakers, thus turning the scheme into another national cake-sharing spree. Or how do you describe a DGN member who has not shot a film in the last 10 years?

    I’d thought that this scheme would be mindful of ‘momentary’ filmmakers, and not fall for cheap blackmail and favoritism. But the present development may just be the beginning of failure of this project, which is being managed by the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, and Minister of Tourism, Chief Edem Duke.

    Although one member declined the offer, 23 got $6000 each, $3000 being for tuition, while the second-half covered travel and living expenses for the participants during their stay in the United States. Mark my word, none of these beneficiaries will come up with something unique, meaning we have only succeeded in marking time without matching. In other words, the film industry has only managed to record another history of wastage. This is because for a filmmaker who has been so laid back for over 10 years, a crash programme in the US can never be enough inspiration. And for some of the beneficiaries who are still active filmmakers, I’m waiting to see the difference in their directorial ability in their next project.

    One thing I know for sure, some people have just used the opportunity to visit the US, perhaps for the first time, while others may have earned a free flight ticket for shopping. N450, 000 is a lot to some of these guys. End of story.

    In this entire travesty, where lies the sensitivity of the fund managers to the actual development of Nollywood? If, indeed, they care, their honest audience for this kind of training could have been the young generation of Nigerian filmmakers who still carry fire in them. Some of them have just come out of schools like the Nigerian Film Institute (NFI), Jos, and the Independent Television Producers Association of Nigeria (ITPAN), and are already beating these old crops to their game.

    It is a pity that when award-winning Director of Photography (DOP), Yinka Edward, who is also an alumnus of NFI applied for this fund to horn his skill at the London Film School, he was refused on the grounds that the fund is not for academic purposes. Now, what is less academic in a programme at the University of Colorado?

    There is a serious problem of priority and transparency in this scheme that it tends to make a mess of President Goodluck Jonathan’s largesse for the film industry.

    I dare say that while the major problem of Nollywood lies in piracy and distribution, the capacity building initiative is like putting that cart before the horse. What gives us the assurance that the larger percentage of the money said to be dedicated for distribution will be well appropriated?

    I see no reason why the managers of this fund and their media departments are keeping hush over some aspects of their decision. This is a Federal Government’s initiative; and for the purpose of transparency, the public deserves to know who these beneficiaries are. In fact, as showy as they are of some projects with political undertone, they ought to publish the names of the beneficiaries in the dailies.

    The last time I checked, there was anxiety over who the 40 practitioners said to have benefitted under the Capacity Training Fund (CTF) were. Paul Nwabuikwu, Special Adviser to Okonjo-Iweala, said the number was increasing as the process went on, and that it was best to wait until the process is completed.

    From an invisible list of 40, we got to know that only 23 went for the training. There is no clear document stating if the 40 were later pruned to 23 or 24 as the case may be, or if there will be training for more applicants in this segment at a later date.

    This is what you get when Ministries with little or no knowledge of the Nigerian film industry are put in charge of sensitive matters such as funding, when agencies like the Nigerian Film Corporation (NFC) and the National Film and Video Censors Board (NFVCB) still exist.

    Obviously, there is a serious fog over this fund issue; and if things continue the way they are, it may just be right to say we already know the end from the beginning.

  • What is Boko Haram?

    What is Boko Haram?

    This is not a good time to be an expatriate Nigerian.

    No, I take that back; this is a particularly bad time to be an expatriate Nigerian, given the steady flow of bad news, bad news and more bad news out of the country. Even the rebasing that has catapulted Nigeria from the doldrums to the world’s 26th largest economy overnight has not translated into equanimity for the expatriate Nigerian.

    Our political and diplomatic strategists will have to take a cue from the economic strategists to rebase the national image.

    The latter drew on Nigeria’s burgeoning home video industry Nollywood to boost the Gross Domestic Product by a full percentage point and some. The former will have to factor in Wole Soyinka, Chinua Achebe, JP Clarke, Christopher Okigbo, Niyi Osundare, Femi Osofisan, John Cardinal Onaiyekan, the Super Eagles, Ben Nwabueze, Kenneth Dike, JF Ade Ajayi, Claude Ake, Yusuf Grillo, Bruce Onobrakpeya, Demas Nwoko. Simeon Adebo, Jerome Udoji, Peter Lassa, Ali Akilu, Afigbo Adiele, Bala Usman, Gani Fawehinmi, Ben Enwonwu, the Brothers Ransome-Kuti, Abubakar Imam, Ayodele Awojobi, DO Fagunwa,Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Cyprian Ekwensi, Mokwugo Okoye, Jelani Aliyu, and others too numerous to list, in rebasing the national image.

    Surely, the country that produced these luminaries and others too numerous to name here deserves a better appellation than the land of Boko Haram and rampaging “Fulani herdsmen.” “Rebranding” was the name Dr Dora Akunyili’s gave this heroic but ultimately futile undertaking when she was Minister of Information. That was then.

    Now, in keeping with the times, the effort will have to be re-launched, the goal being to rebase Nigeria’s foreign image, the image that follows them wherever they go, defines them and often haunts them, an image they can never shed nor escape from.

    Their green passports or the line in their foreign passports naming Nigeria as their country of birth literally proclaims that image at foreign ports, assuming they survive the indignities that come with applying for a travel visa. From then on, the passport holder is put through the formidable challenge of proving that he or she is not guilty of the crimes and misdemeanours now associated with being a Nigerian.

    To this discomfiting experience we must now add the prospect of being regarded as a national of a country infested by terrorism, and of quite possibly being perceived as a covert sympathiser or enabler of bomb-throwing Islamists and throat-cutting “Fulani herdsmen” or a close relation of theirs.

    Each time I enter the coffee room or a class, I hold my breath, hoping fervently that my faculty colleagues and students will not bring up the latest bulletin on Boko Haram’s and Fulani herdsmen’s running orgy of bestial violence, however obliquely.

    Even the most basic question on the matter would stump me, namely, what is Boko Haram?

    More than three years after Boko Haram hit the front pages and the headlines, I still cannot claim with confidence that I know what it is. If pressed on the matter, I can only say that it is a malignant, nihilistic affliction on the body politic. But that is describing the manifestation rather than defining the essence.

    Only its masterminds and its denizens know what Boko Haram is. The security agencies do not know, and neither does President Goodluck Jonathan. He is on record as having admitted that much and adding, as if to deepen the mystery, that for all he knew, some members of his cabinet and advisers who met and dined and wined with him every day could well be members of Boko Haram.

    Whatever Boko Haram may be, it is not a monolith as is generally supposed, according to a source I cannot identify. There is the political Boko Haram, which carries out large-scale operations like blowing up churches and motor parks and police stations and prisons and other public facilities – the one whose masked operatives toting Kalashnikov rifles and rocket-propelled grenades race in Hillux vans through desert shrubbery to distant outposts, their grisly errands to perform.

    Then there is the mafia-like Boko Haram, which specialises in criminal extortion and is not above being hired by aggrieved persons to settle scores. If the twain are related, it is not clear what the relationship consists in, my source tells me.

    In the North, nobody talks about the one or the other, for fear of murderous reprisal. It is as if the subject is haram, forbidden. The fear of Boko Haram is the beginning of wisdom – and survival.

    If I don’t know what Boko Haram is, I can hardly be expected to know what it wants. I don’t. Nobody knows for sure what Boko Haram wants. Is their goal the islamisation of Nigeria through terror, as some commentators have claimed? If that is the case, why is it that they do not spare fellow Muslims in their murderous rampage?

    Is it to make Nigeria ungovernable? They certainly have made a swathe of North-eastern Nigeria ungovernable, but reducing the entire country to that condition seems a goal too far. Even if that goal is attainable, what purpose would it serve?

    To provoke the military into taking over, perhaps, and thus terminate Dr Jonathan’s effete administration?

    Which military? The one that can’t even protect its own facilities and personnel against the insurgents? The one that claimed to have rescued more than 100 girls abducted by Boko Haram from a secondary school in Chibok, Borno State, only to declare without fear and without shame when it was challenged that it had been “misled”?

    “Misled” by whom? On how many other crucial issues has it been “misled,” and with what consequences?

    The military in which a unit can be suborned by a junior cabinet minister, a minor politician with no following, to halt by force of arms a housing construction project being lawfully undertaken by the government of his state, and in which the same minister can deploy soldiers to subvert the electoral process in another state?

    Again, if pressed by those seeking to learn more about the phenomenon known as Boko Haram, I cannot explain why none of its stalwarts has been brought to justice. At the scene of every Boko Haram outrage, President Jonathan vows solemnly that the perpetrators would not go unpunished. The next week brings another outrage, which draws another solemn vow from the President. And then the next.

    Nor can I explain why President Jonathan, the nation’s comforter-in-chief, headed to Kano while the public was still trying to grasp the full measure of the carnage at Nyanya Motor Park in Abuja for a ceremony to welcome a defector back to the PDP.

    Since this was a party affair, could it not have been postponed as a mark of respect to those who were still counting the dead? If the rally must hold, could the PDP national chair not have been dispatched as the featured guest?

    Did he have to trade abuse on the occasion with Kano State Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso who belongs in the political opposition? Such pusillanimity, it is necessary to insist, ill becomes the person and the office of the President. Entertaining the party faithful to a jig while Nyanya was still smouldering made Dr Jonathan come across as unfeeling.

    Even his trip to Ibadan the same day to attend ceremonies marking the Olubadan’s 100th birthday was at bottom a re-election ploy inexcusable under the circumstances.

    If Dr Jonathan cannot rise to the high office of President of the Republic, must he cut it down to fit his own modest profile?

  • Nollywood needs to  produce more quality  films –Bimbo Manuel

    Nollywood needs to produce more quality films –Bimbo Manuel

    Veteran actor and AMVCA 2014 nominee, Bimbo Manuel speaks with GBOYEGA ALAKA on the secrets of his youthful looks, Nollywood, its new generation of players and Bimbo/Sola Connect, which he co-hosts with Sola Salako on LTV.

    SMOOTH and suave Bimbo Manuel scores a high any day in the Nigeria’s television and movies industry. His rich resume spans about three decades and includes exploits as an actor, producer, director, voice-over artist and presenter. Even at 56, Manuel already annexed a spot for himself as an industry veteran, except that there still seems to be so much ‘fight’ in him. He caught the eyes of the viewing public with his stellar performances in Checkmate and Ripples – two household television soaps of the late 1980s and early 1990s, and also Tade Ogidan’s movie, Hostages (1996), which was later serialised on television. Manuel has also featured in a good number of Nollywood movies, including The kingmaker (2002), Sitanda (2006), Tango with me (2012) and most recently, Torn, produced and directed by Moses Inwang. His performance in Torn, as a psychoanalyst also got him a nomination in the Africa Magic Viewers Choice Awards (AMVCA) Best Support Actor category for works done in 2013, underlining yet again his huge acting talent.

    Television viewers will also recognise him more as the very confident and sassy male co-anchor of the Lagos Television (LTV) Saturday morning magazine show, Bimbo/Sola Connect, who refuses to be intimidated by a somewhat ‘overbearing’ co-host, Sola Salako.

    Aside the TV talk show, Manuel, however, seems to star in fewer films than his contemporaries. Naturally, this turned out a major high point of our discussion as we took a ride with him in between some studio works on a hot afternoon in Lagos. For an actor of his repute, we simply sought to know why his appearances seem to be so few and far between.

    Manuel, however, says it is all about being more focused on issues than money and the fact that the things that we stand for have to endure and outlive us. “To appear in every film one gets invited to will seem to suggest that one is desperate for money.”

    He also says it’s a deliberate strategy “to be fresh in the consciousness of not just the directors and producers, but also the viewing public.”

    What about the secret of his youthful look? We asked. Safe for his white beard, Manuel would very easily pass for a man in his early 40s. But Manuel says it’s all about mindset and approach to life. “I’m an optimist. I also believe very firmly that age is in the mind. You’re as old as you think you are.”

    He also does not think about age, when relating with people, whether young or old.

    Manuel also has some very strong views about Nigeria’s film industry, Nollywood. First he quells the opinion in a certain interview that seems to portray him as an incurable optimist of the industry, saying “I may have been misquoted.”

    “Although I do not do a lot of press, people who know me, know that I hold these views, especially about the things we’re not doing right or that we’re not doing at all. It may not have made me very popular amongst the Nollywood politicians, but I know that some of them also view me with respect because they know that whatever I say is not borne out of envy for anyone.”

    Having said that, Manuel yet again expresses some optimism about the industry. He is a bit unclear about this optimism, saying it may not be limited to the film industry alone. “It is inclusive of general entertainment, broadcast and all that. And that optimism is born out of what we see in the industry, where young people who are proving to us that indeed some of those things that we were afraid to attempt, do or say, can indeed be done. “

    These young people, he says, are in the vanguard of the growth and regeneration of the industry and are the ones really making the films and creating the shows that are going to the cinemas and making waves across Africa and the world. “They’re the ones repositioning the entertainment and movies industry of Nigeria on the global map and showing that Nigeria can indeed compete fairly on the global stage. So when they talk about Nigeria in the context of such projects, it is these people they are referring to. The likes of Kunle Afolayan, OC Ukeje, Lala Akindoju, Uti; truly young people, who’re very vibrant and are showing vision. They get trained in modern art, which for me is very key.”

    He, however, expresses doubts as to whether these new people truly desire to be addressed as Nollywood, having heard expressions like New Nollywood in some circles.

    We also took him up on the tendency of Nigeria to play second fiddle at major African movies awards. The recent Africa Magic Viewers Choice Awards (AMVCA), where the major awards were again carted away by countries like Kenya and Ghana, leaving Nigeria to again settle for individual awards is another case in point.

    “It is an extension of what we’ve been saying,” he began. “The fact that Nigerian films even get nominated for these awards is a positive statement, because there was a time, when we were never even considered for nomination – because of the kind of films we were making.”

    The fact that we’re now getting nominations therefore shows that there is more professionalism and the standards have indeed gone up. But again, he insists that the industry needs to generally grow and dedicate more energy to making quality films, as against just making huge volumes of films for the sake of it.

    As for those countries that seem to leave Nigeria eating dust, Bimbo Manuel says he will not join in the discussion that seems to suggest some kind of conspiracy. “If they win so regularly, it just shows that they are better in that which they do. We won individual awards, but you will also notice that those awards were generally in the areas where votes were counted by the public. The fact that we have the population on our side means that we will win anywhere and any day over anyone on the continent, when it is public vote-related.”

    He also does not think that Nigeria’s limitation is solely about budget. In his opinion, “a producer could carry a hundred million dollars into a film and still come to nothing if he does not deploy all the production values correctly. Conversely, a producer could have a lot of money and yet decide on a small budget project, know what he wants, insist on what he wants by deploying the proper values, and come out a winner.” Therefore, money may count, but he thinks that attitude as a major factor has to change.

    The fact that Nigerian films still struggle to reenact convincing fire and accident scenes also show that we have not mastered stunts, which Manuel says is a key ingredient in film-making. “It means that we have not quite mastered the art and techniques of cinematography. And if these form a part of the judgment of what a good film is, it means we failed. That’s not money; that is technique. That is education.”

    Away from Nollywood, Bimbo Manuel has also transited overtime from a radio presenter in the old Ogun State Broadcasting Corporation, to become an all-rounder with commendable skills in voice-over, acting, TV and movie production/ directing, TV presenting and writing. Would this be a case of natural endowment or deliberate skills acquisition? We inquired.

    “It was not anything deliberate. I started out as a radio presenter; and because of that, I learnt to do voice-overs. I trained as a director in school remember, I read Theatre Arts. Acting was therefore a part of my classes. But to produce, I learnt; to write, I learnt. And that was because I didn’t want to be playing in every acting job I was offered, because as an actor you could burn out very easily.” He explained.

    So he learnt the different skills just so he could diversify, and earn money doing other things aside acting. He concedes though that appearing in fewer films has its downsides, as an artist could easily get out of the consciousness of his fans. “But again, it’s a choice. You could choose to be popular or to be respected. I chose to be a respected actor.”

     

    On his AMVCA nomination

    “I’d like to establish that I was glad to be nominated, although it was not my intention to play for an award nomination. To win would definitely have been a fantastic addition to my chest of awards, but I’ll confess here that I didn’t bother to get anyone to vote for me because it was satisfying enough that fellow professionals deemed the work I did good enough to stand amongst that cast of excellent actors. I’d also said to myself that any of the other guys on that list who won, would be deserving of it. You have Chris Atto on the list; and of course Desmond Eliot, who eventually won.

     

    On Bimbo/Sola Connect

    The Bimbo/Sola Connect show is one show that is very dear to him, especially because he never had enough opportunity to do consistent broadcasting, since leaving OGBC. He was therefore glad when the opportunity came, courtesy of Lekan Ogunbanwo, the then permanent secretary of Lagos Television, who was looking to rejuvenate the once popular station. It also necessitated his first meeting with the co-anchor, Sola Salako.

    “Even the name, Bimbo/Sola Connect was Ogunbanwo’s creation, as it was he who noticed how quickly they both gelled during that first meeting and came up with it.

    He complements Salako the harmony on the show, saying “She is a more vocal and more communicative person. “Even the logo, which has our backs to each other, is deliberately conceived to emphasise the conflicts in our characters.” Manuel concluded