Tag: Theatre

  • Ododo presents commercial buses to boost theatre

    Ododo presents commercial buses to boost theatre

    As Professor Sunday Ododo made his final exit as the General Manager of the National Theatre, Lagos, last week, he presented three vehicles for commercial purposes within the Theatre complex. Edozie Udeze was there.

    As part of his parting gifts to the members of staff of the National Theatre, Iganmu, Lagos, the immediate past General Manager, Professor Sunday Ododo before finally leaving office last week provided two mini buses and one tricycle (Keke Napep) to ease the transport system within the Theatre premises. While presenting the buses to the members of staff, Ododo assured them that the money used in purchasing the buses were part of the Internally Generated Revenue (IGR). Ododo was one manager who believed and also worked towards it, that the National Theatre could be made to generate enough funds both for itself and for the federal government.

    Despite the fact that most of the facilities within the Theatre complex had been out of use due to renovations, Ododo and his team were able to device new methods of generating revenues for the government. In fact, it was based on those revenues that the three vehicles were bought. As a matter of fact, the idea of the transport system is to help people, visitors, tourists, those who alight from the blue line train station to be transported out of the premises for easier movement onwards.

    Ododo, a Professor of Theatre Arts and a practical technocrat was of the opinion that those given the responsibilities to run government departments and agencies should be able to look inwards and generate revenues for government. This is why he took it upon himself and put on his thinking cap when the renovations commenced. He did not only build an alternative make-shift theatre venue for the use of thespians and theatre buffs, he also used the venue to attract people and money and events to the premises. So even as the renovations held sway some events that yielded money still took place within the premises.

    Within the precincts also other avenues were created in alliance with the marketing department in order to keep the hope alive. In other words, the ideas to create wealth was constantly renewed and re-energized by those given the responsibility to think wisely in that direction. In fact, the IGR of the Theatre rose higher than most people expected.

    Ododo said, “One of the things I promised was to have a transport system that would ease movement within the Theatre environment. It is to help the complex comply with transportation. As you know, the complex has some other agencies within it and the complex is large and expansive. We have APCON, NICO, NGA, National Troupe. There is also NAN within here. With the renovations going on we have stopped commercial vehicles operating within the complex.

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    “It has been terrible for commuters and for our own movements. With this now, it becomes easier for people to come in to relax and enjoy our enjoyment centre, which is abe-igi. It is also to serve the general public. It will add to the general glamour for which the Theatre is known. Don’t forget also that two years ago we introduced a tricycle in this regard”. He went on, “That was to test-run how this transport system could be effectively run. So from there we stepped up to acquire more vehicles. The result is what we are presenting to you today. All the money used to purchase these was internally generated. It is our IGR and we are proud to say that in spite of the renovations here with the Theatre practically closed to public use, we were able to achieve this. The money for this was not from over-head or from capital. What that means therefore is that we can equally do more.

    “With the operation of blue line in place, we need to step-up this to help people move around easily. Therefore the unveiling of this is to key ahead into the Lagos State transport system.  As the passengers from the blue line are alighting, there are buses to convey them to the gates of the complex. And you know this complex has three gates each too far from one another”.

    The event attracted all the management and members of staff of National Theatre. However, before the programme, Ododo’s replacement had already been announced by the federal government. But because she had not reported as at the time of this presentation, it behooved on Ododo to perform the ceremony amid joy and excitement from the members of staff. On the vehicles are written the insignias, logos and symbols of the Theatre. Incidentally what you have is the National Arts Theatre, a nomenclature that had been eroded since time. Now it has resurfaced on the vehicles. The Theatre is not only for the purposes of the arts. It is the apex culture house of the nation. It is all encompassing and for multi-purposes, which includes all the razzmatazz of cultures, traditions, entertainments and so on and so forth.

  • The Power of One elevates solo theatre

    The Power of One elevates solo theatre

    •  By Elizabeth Ganiyu

    The birth of the book, The Power of One: An Anthology of Nigerian Solo Plays has marked a marked a significant moment in the world of Nigerian theater, introducing a collection of 16 distinct plays from 13 authors, each offering a unique narrative and performance style.

    Greg Mbajiorgu, the editor of the anthology and a contributor to two of the plays, shared his journey into the world of solo performance. His story began unconventionally during his Youth Service year in Calabar, where he found himself in a situation that steered him towards solo theater. His performance of The Prime Minister’s Son in those early days laid the foundation for his role in the development of solo theatre in Nigeria.

    What became apparent through Mbajiorgu’s narrative was the necessity to document solo performances. He emphasised that the written word can transcend the transient nature of live performances, ensuring that these creative endeavors are preserved for generations to come. 

    “Everytime there was an interactive session in anywhere I had performed, they’d ask one question, Is Chinua Achebe still in UNN? That question got me very disturbed because I said to myself, Chinua Achebe never travelled around like I did but everywhere I go, they ask me about him which means that the written word is greater than the performative. I realized that there’s so much that artists do in this country that is not documented and if we begin to carefully document them, we can set a standard for other African countries.” he expressed.

    Renowned playwright and thespian, Ben Tomoloju has incorporated some of the solo plays into his post-graduate courses at the University of Lagos, emphasizing the educational depth they provide to aspiring actors. He, who was also the convener of the book’s presentation and writer of the book’s introduction highlighted the rigorous nature of solo theatre as a trial for actors’ versatility while indicating the challenging task required of them to embody multiple characters within a single performance.

     “The dynamics of the solo play tests the skill of the individual. You’re going to play the role of maybe 10 people on stage and the formula that is being invented into it by Greg Mbajiorgu is that you feel every character through one actor… Solo play is a test play of your abilities to be a total actor. We hope this will challenge the system to do right for the art,” he said.

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    Emeritus Professor El Anatsui showered praise on the book, characterizing it as a treasure for multi-talented actors. He underscored the unique freedom and flexibility it offers to solo performers. Anatsui further emphasized that Nigeria has reached a momentous point in its theatrical history with the publication of its first anthology of solo plays.

    Mbajiorgu’s vision extends beyond the anthology. He envisions establishing a conservatory for solo theatrical acts in Lagos, a foundational step towards creating a school dedicated to nurturing and promoting minimalist arts. 

    Ahmed Yerima, who recently completed his first solo play, The Gadfly contributes to the success of the anthology. He took the occasion to pay homage to the late Peter Oyeyemi Obe, a revered photojournalist and Chief Cameraman of the Daily Times. His tribute added an emotional touch to the book, connecting the worlds of theater and visual storytelling.

    Among the anthology’s thought-provoking plays, Esther’s Last Wish by Benedict Binebai stands out. This poetic drama serves as an advocacy for improved healthcare delivery systems to combat breast cancer among women. Esther’s story is a touching one, serving as a call to action against this pervasive disease.

  • ‘Theatre will absorb creative minds, create jobs’

    Governor Akinwunmi Ambode has said the Lagos Theatre project was conceived as strategy to absorb many Lagosians with the ability to be innovative and imaginative, especially the youths. He said it is also to provide a platform for artistic expressions in film making, stage theatre, poetry, dance, music and other stage performances. This, according to the Governor, will also set the stage for theatre experience in four strategic locations across the state.

    Ambode spoke at the recent commissioning of the Lagos Theatre in Oregun by President Muhammadu Buhari, which was part of major landmark projects executed by Governor Ambode’s administration.The 400 audience capacity theatre is one of the 4 theatres conceived and executed by the Ambode-led administration in line with the vision to make Tourism, Hospitality, Entertainment and Sports the center piece of development agenda for the youths and the artistically endowed.

    “The Lagos Theatre located at Oregun and replicated in other areas of the state which includes: Igando, Epe and Badagry in its first phase, is to expand arts and performance spaces in Lagos and promote a thriving creative economy within the communities where these projects are located,” he said.

    He noted that the Lagos State Government’s initiative to bring theatre experience closer to more neighborhoods across the state will also generate positive excitement among the teeming youths of Lagos State.

    The Lagos Theatre in Oregun like the others located at Igando, Epe and Badagry  will sit more than 400 audience comfortably with a standard furnishing, a gallery, artiste changing room, rehearsal hall, restaurant space, rest rooms, alternative power generating sets and a well-laid out car park.

    The commissioning was attended by some members of the federal executive council, presidential aides and State Governors such as IbikunleAmosunof Ogun State, RotimiAkeredolu  ofOndo State, IsiakaAjimobi, of Oyo State,  KayodeFayemi of Ekiti State as well as the Governor-elect of Lagos State, MrBabajideSanwoolu and his deputy ObafemiHamzat.

    The event was also attended by All Progressive Congress party chieftains led by the State Chairman, Hon TundeBalogun as well as members of the State Executive Council, body of Permanent Secretaries and other top government officials.

  • American Comedian Brings Wong Street Journal to Lagos Theatre Festival

    American Comedian Brings Wong Street Journal to Lagos Theatre Festival

    Renowned American performance artist and comedian, Kristina Wong, is visiting Lagos this week to participate in the Lagos Theatre Festival.   The festival runs from  February 27 to March 4.

    Supported by the United States Consulate General Lagos, Wong will conduct master classes for performing arts students, faculty, and theatrical directors at the University of Lagos, Lufodo Academy of Performing Arts, and PEFTI Film Institute.

    During the festival, Wong, who is notable for her works focusing on women and economic empowerment, will perform her critically acclaimedWong Street Journal show on Friday, March 2. The event will be hosted by United States Consul General, Mr.  F. John Bray, at Terra Kulture Arts and Cultural Centre, Lagos.

    Public Affairs Officer, U.S. Consulate General Lagos, Ms. Darcy Zotter, expressed optimism that Wong’s visit to Nigeria will strengthen cross-cultural understanding and collaboration between the people of Nigeria and the United States.

    ”The Public Affairs Sections of our Embassy in Abuja and Consulate General in Lagos sponsor programs that share the best of the U.S. arts community with Nigeria.

    “We are pleased to support Kristina Wong’s participation at the 2018 Lagos Theatre Festival.  She is one of the many American arts professionals who have come to Nigeria to give performances, and mentor young Nigerian artists,” Zotter said.

    Wong has created five solo shows and one ensemble play that have toured throughout the United States and United Kingdom.

    Her most notable touring show ––Wong Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest looked at the high rates of depression and suicide among Asian-American women and has toured to over 40 venues since 2006.

  • When theatre plays the oracle

    When theatre plays the oracle

    An hour and 30 minutes was all it took to chronicle the socio-economic history of Nigeria and provide a prophecy of how matters will turn out in the country.

    The venue was the Lagos Country Club at Ikeja and the event was a staging of Femi Osofisan’s Once upon Four Robberson. Indeed, drama, a well-known tool of social commentary, played the oracle in this performance and the audience constituted the prophet, delivering the words of the oracle. Ibadan playhouse, the theatre group staging the performance, has a habit of staging a play every month at the same venue.

    The theatre troupe kicked off two years ago and aims to use theatre as a means of charity. They prefer to have people coming to watch their performances and inviting others to come than sending donations, for the aim is not to rake in inordinate profits, but to spread the theatre gospel. In fact, the first Sunday of next month is billed to witness a restaging of Wole Soyinka’s The Lion and the Jewel.

    The play opens with the execution of a robber – whose luck had found the door and made rapid use of it – at the Bar Beach in Lagos during the military era. After the execution, his fellow purloiners meet at the spot of his execution and reminisce the good old days. Along comes a Muslim cleric, Aafa, with a diabolic glint in his eye, and two of the robbers, Hassan and Angola, try to send him to the grave. The cleric instantly enchants them with a mystical spell and they soon find themselves bowing and scraping in prayer.

    After extensive negotiation with Alhaja and Major, the other two pilferers, the enchanter releases Hassan and Angola from his spell and even agrees to give them a charm to facilitate their robbery on the condition that they do not rob the poor, they onlyrob public places and they do not kill. They agree and he gives each of them a quarter of the required spell so that they can only use it together. They make two successful raids on the market with the spell, which works by making unsuspecting victims dance and go to sleep.

    On the second raid, Major tries to double-cross them by stealing from them after they have stolen from the market, but some soldiers appear at the scene and lodge a bullet in him. The remaining robbers fly to the three winds while the soldiers pocket the stolen cash. Consequently, despite Major’s treachery, the remaining robbers try to rescue him on the day of his execution and are halfway there when the play asks the audience to choose which party wins – the robbers or the soldiers.

    Marxist in plot and diction, the play ran the risk of appearing tedious from the get-go due to the sombre ambience of the opening scene, an execution. There was no distinct opening glee, for indeed, a revolution needs no prologue; all it requires is a spark to get things going. When decisive bullets had despatched Alani, the lead robber, played by a defiant looking Ojo Williams, the tempo switches to high-octane repartee delivery as the robbers argue whether to retire or avenge Alani. Creditably, thespians of the Ibadan Playhouse (the performing theatre troupe) said they memorised and regurgitated long stretches of ‘quadrulogue’, for so we must refer to a snappy argument between four characters.

    They held forte on stage until Aafa, played by Fisayo Akinnibosun, appears and it is imperative to remark here that stage management, if done as properly as a French chef brews his gravy, can have nothing to do with cheesiness. Such was the case as a proper distribution of actors on stage had the overall effect of shooting lines at the audience from all angles of the stage. With your eye continually roving to catch the actor in speech, you would not have the time to sleep. This masterful stroke is not surprising as the director, Muyideen Oladapo, often known on TV as Lala, is no greenhorn at directing.

    A graduate of the Department of Dramatic Arts from Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, he noted: “Drama is changing rapidly. People no longer want to watch the classic texts of the first and second generation playwrights. They need something new, so if you are going to stage a classic, then you need to revolutionise it. I had to tweak a few things to make it more entertaining.

    ‘’Entertainment was certainly up for grabs as the play, not reliant on excessive use of spectacle, played adequately on farcical choreography, avoided slapstick as much as possible, and did what a complete satire should do; criticise certain societal ills. This is, particularly, true as Major, played by Samuel Oladehinde, utters the following anti-oppression remarks as he is about to be executed, “Today the law is on the side of those who have, and in abundance… But tomorrow that law will change. The poor will seize it and twist its neck.”

    Shortly after that, Angola (Funsho Ayodele), Alhaja (Adedolapo Adesuyi) and Hassan (Segun Adeyemi) swoop in and do a dare devil act in rescuing him. That was certainly not his day to die.

    It is never easy to stage a satire and not turn it into a comedy, Osofisan’s message when writing the play was to speak against socio-economic oppression, and the test to determine if his message has been passed is that quiz at the end that asks the audience to determine who has the day; the robbers or the soldiers.

    Oladapo noted prior to the performance that the robbers almost always win the debate, and as it was those many years ago, so it was last Sunday.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • From theatre to the media:   Odyssey of Yemi Ogunbiyi at 70

    From theatre to the media: Odyssey of Yemi Ogunbiyi at 70

    A former Personal Assistant to  ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo on Domestic Affairs, Mr Tunde Olusunle, in this piece, examines the contributions of a former Managing Director of Daily Times, Dr Yemi Ogunbiyi, who clocks 70 today, to the media  industry 

    This essay attempts an examination of the variegated professional career of Yemi Ogunbiyi, one of the most prominent shapers of the contemporary media practice in Nigeria and his contributions to Nigerian theatre scholarship; literary criticism and new journalism in Nigeria. It traces his vocational origins as a theatre scholar and practitioner, through his venture into journalism, as an innovator and seasoned administrator in two of Nigeria’s largest newspaper conglomerates in their time, Guardian Newspapers Limited and the Daily Times of Nigeria Plc, and his more recent endeavours in public relations, advertising and publishing.
    It is not unexpected that contemporary engagers of the Yemi Ogunbiyi phenomenon will most readily define him within the context of his most recent endeavours in advertising, public relations and publishing.
    This will be most fitting for a man who has devoted the better part of the last three decades in the challenging terrains of these variegated, albeit mutually compatible vocations.
    For the avoidance of doubt, about 25 years ago, Ogunbiyi launched into advertising and public relations, when he established Tanus Communications Ltd, to compete in a market hitherto dominated by much older brands in the industry. With pre-existing labels such as Lintas Ltd; Insight Communications Ltd; SO and U Ltd, and similar outfits, already setting the pace in the sector, Ogunbiyi’s creation was without doubt, a neophyte.
    Ogunbiyi’s Tanus Communications, which began operations May 1992, started less than five months after his exit from the Daily Times of Nigeria Plc, where he had functioned as Chief Executive for almost three years. Followers of his media odyssey, which began at the turn of the 1980s with the establishment of The Guardian, had, presumably looked forward to the extension and continuation of his career in journalism, the profession which had brought him so much fame and goodwill in the preceding years. His foray into these extensions of the mass media, without doubt, elicited confoundment from many.
    Not too many remember, however, that Ogunbiyi actually began his illustrious professional career, which has spanned the better part of the past five decades, in the theatre. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Literature in English from the University of Ibadan in 1971; attended the New York University, Brooklyn for graduate studies and received a Master of Arts and Doctorate Degrees, respectively, between 1972 and 1976. His Doctorate thesis, supervised by the American scholar, Richard Schechecner, was based on film criticism. He subsequently returned to Nigeria to take up a lectureship appointment at the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University).
    As he turns 70, April 13, 2017, however, it becomes germane to interrogate the career and enterprise of this scholar, former university teacher, journalist, administrator, public relations doyen and publisher, to properly situate his contributions to these professions and to national development. This is critical so that salient aspects of this endeavours are not casually subsumed under the canopy of his most recent ventures in the Nigerian business and commercial sector.
    Yemi Ogunbiyi’s vocational origins are resident in the finest traditions of the academia, his ideological affiliation and scholastic temperament distinctly of the left-wing Marxian hue, without genuflections. He thus found good company in the Department of Literature of “Unife”, (the abbreviation by which the University of Ife was popularly known), with colleagues like the venerated Nobel Laureate, Wole Soyinka, and the younger Biodun Jeyifo, the fiery critic and theorist; Kole Omotosho, the prolific novelist and literary documentanist and the highly respected oral literature scholar, Godini Gabriel Darah.
    Ogunbiyi joined Soyinka, Omotosho, Femi Osofisan, Dapo Adelugba, Rasheed Onikoyi, Joel Adedeji and Femi Johnson, on the cast of the film adaptation of Kongi’s Harvest, written by Soyinka and co-directed by Soyinka and the African American film director, Ossie Davies, during those years preceding the eventual blossoming of a film and television sub-culture in the University of Ife.
    It was not any surprise therefore, that following the re-configuration of the Department of Literature and the subsequent establishment of the Department of Dramatic Arts in 1977, Ogunbiyi was one of the very first members of the academic staff to be redeployed to the new creation, to join Soyinka.
    Ahmed Yerima in his keynote address at the Third Edition of the Ife International Film Festival, November 29 to December 2, 2012, notes the foundational role played by Ogunbiyi in the development of a film and television curriculum for the University of Ife:
    Film and Television did not come into the Department of Dramatic Arts curriculum until 1978, when the degree programme was started…..
    The Ife curriculum was greatly inspired by Yemi Ogunbiyi (who) was seconded from the Department of Literature to assist Soyinka in setting up the Department of Dramatic Arts…. Ogunbiyi’s background in film gave birth to the course which was titled “Film and Television”.
    Against the backdrop of his endeavours in film and indeed his facial resemblance to the revered African American film actor, Richard Roundtree, who was a household name in the 1970s and whose stage alias was “Shaft”, Ogunbiyi was equally nicknamed Shaft by his numerous contemporaries and friends. He later proved to be the critical shaft of many organisations and initiatives in which he was involved, over time.
    In 1981, Ogunbiyi released the seminal work: Drama and Theatre In Nigeria: A Critical Source Book. The volume which was edited by him, is an assemblage of rigorously researched academic essays by some of the most formidable names in dramatic criticism. These include Soyinka, Jeyifo, Ossie Onuora Enekwe, MJC Echeruo, Ola Rotimi, Dapo Adelugba, Ulli Beier and Ebun Clark. The work remains an invaluable resource material for teachers, students, researchers and enthusiasts alike, in the generational evolution and multicultural dimensions of drama and theatre in Nigeria, as envisioned by Ogunbiyi in the preface to the book. There he defines his motivation for the volume as one informed by the need to:
    …Readily make available those essays which are not quite accessible to students of African theatre history in our universities and colleges. It would also promote a serious starting point for the much needed re-evaluation of Nigerian drama and theatre. (xiii)
    Side by side with his teaching pre-occupation, Ogunbiyi also teamed up with Jeyifo to co-found Positive Review, a journal of society and culture in Black Africa. The journal encapsulated the thoughts and ideals of a generation of left-inclined creative writers and scholars, including Omolara Ogundipe-Leslie, Odia Ofeimun and other more familiar names at the time.
    Ogunbiyi rose to the position of Senior Lecturer and Acting Head of the Department of Dramatic Arts, before he joined the Editorial Board of The Guardian newspapers on an initial one-year sabbatical, at the inception of the newspaper, in 1983.
    Recounting his first meeting with the founder and pioneer publisher of The Guardian, Alex Uruemu Ibru, in a December 12, 2011 tribute, Ogunbiyi says:
    I recall clearly my first meeting with Mr. Alex Ibru. It was in June of 1983. After months of prodding from Dr. Stanley Macebuh to join the nascent team at The Guardian, I accepted his offer to visit the premises of the organisation at Rutam House.
    And as was the tradition in those days, Dr. Macebuh took me to see Mr. Ibru first. Coming from Ife, with my heavy dose of latent left wing biases, I was not sure that I wanted to meet Mr. Ibru just yet. The meeting turned out to be brief…..
    Ogunbiyi subsequently agreed to join the Editorial Board of The Guardian, the intellectual engine room of the organisation.
    In The Whole Truth (2004) a compendium of selected editorials of The Guardian from 1983 to 2003, edited by Reuben Abati, Ogunbiyi is listed in the top ten bracket of 72 full time members of the board; visiting members and consultants alike, among some of the most highly regarded names in the media industry. His colleagues included contemporaries from the academia like Macebuh, Onwuchekwa Jemie, Chinweizu, Osofisan, Herbert Ekwe Ekwe and core media professionals like Sully Abu, Sonala Olumhense and Lade Bonuola.
    Whereas his primary editorial brief consisted of generating editorial topics, canvassing them at regular sittings of the board, drafting editorials and sustaining regular op-ed contributions to the newspapers, the creatively restless and expansively-minded Ogunbiyi spawned several editorial novelties.
    Consistent with his primary commitment to the development of criticism and the growth of creative writing, Ogunbiyi, in response to the challenge and encouragement of Macebuh, initiated the Guardian Literary Series, GLS, in conjunction with Osofisan. The objective was to create a public platform for the appreciation of Nigeria’s very rich literary tradition.
    In his foreward to Perspectives on Nigerian Literature: 1700 to the Present, Volume One (1988), a collection of some of the essays published in the Guardian Literary Series, Macebuh notes that:
    The Guardian Literary Series began as an experiment. Creative writing in Nigeria had a long history. But only a few older writers were sufficiently well-known and this was mainly because most of their major works had been published before the economic slump of the late 1980s….
    The idea at The Guardian, initiated primarily by Yemi Ogunbiyi and Femi Osofisan, was to step in where book publishing companies could not and offer on a weekly basis in our newspaper, a series of critical appraisals of Nigerian writers (viii)
    Ogunbiyi corroborates Macebuh in his preface to the second volume of the publication, Perspectives on Nigerian Literature: 1700 to the Present, Volume Two (1988), when he says:
    It was quite clear from the inception of The Guardian as a serious daily newspaper in July 1983, that sooner or later, the newspaper would have to participate in the effort to help “popularise” our vibrant literature.
    It was clear to the founding fathers that the literary pages of a serious national newspaper, had an abiding duty to participate, initiate and even stir up debate in the all-important area of literature and culture. In a broad sense that was the objective for starting the Guardian Literary Series. (xi)
    Giants in literary criticism who contributed to the project included Wole Soyinka, Abiola Irele, Dan Izevbaye, Isidore Okpewho, Biodun Jeyifo, Akinwunmi Isola, Ernest Emenyonu, Sam Asein, Chidi Amuta, Femi Osofisan, Olu Obafemi, Catherine Acholonu, Ibrahim Yaro Yahaya and Adebayo Williams.
    Ogunbiyi equally initiated a series of exclusive interviews with world leaders, which added diversity to the regular buffet of the editorial content of The Guardian. He interviewed Presidents, Heads of State and Prime Ministers like: Shimon Peres of Israel; Muammar Gaddaffi of Libya; Thomas Sankara of Burkina Faso; Julius Nyerere of Tanzania; Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia and Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe.
    Reminiscing on his interview with Gaddaffi which he undertook with the founder of The Guardian, Ogunbiyi recalls:
    By far the most bizarre of our trips was our encounter with Col Gaddaffi. We had arrived on a Saturday for a scheduled Sunday appointment with the “Leader” as he was fondly called in all of Libya. At breakfast the next morning, officials from the President’s office came for us, politely chauffeured us to the airport and flew us out without prior knowledge of our destination, to Benghazi, for what we were assured was to be a prompt interview with Col. Gaddaffi… With the private jet that flew us neatly parked at a nearby aerodrome, we ended up spending three days in Benghazi, in near seclusion, without our bags or change of clothing….
    The publisher never accompanied
    me to another interview!
    Upon completion of his one year sabbatical, Ibru brought a lot of pressure to bear in Ogunbiyi and subsequently appointed him Controller, Office of the Publisher in 1985. In a manner of speaking, he became something of the Chief of Staff to the Publisher. Not long after, he was elevated to the Board of Directors as Executive Director, Public Affairs and Marketing from January 1986 to February 1989. In this capacity, he superintended over the Circulation, Transport and Advertisement Departments, the commercial and operational tripod of the newspaper.
    On March 1, 1989 Ogunbiyi was appointed Managing Director of the Daily Times of Nigeria Plc, to replace Olusegun Osoba, who had just completed a five year stint on the job.
    If Ogunbiyi’s six year sojourn in The Guardian enabled him to learn the ropes of newspaper administration and management, his appointment as Chief Executive of the Daily Times was an opportunity to put into practice the aggregate experience garnered and the lessons learnt. It has indeed been argued that there is perhaps no chief executive of the Daily Times, after the iconic Alhaji Babatunde Jose, who impacted as much on the organisation, as Yemi Ogunbiyi.
    The Daily Times of Nigeria Plc was a humongous conglomerate with almost a dozen diverse subsidiaries, notably: Times Publications Division, TPD, (Publisher of the Daily Times and a host of other publications); Nigerpack Ltd; Times Press Ltd; Times Books Ltd; Times Leisure Services Ltd, (organisers of the annual Miss Nigeria Beauty Pageant); Naira Investments; Naira Properties Ltd; Pilgrims Books Ltd and Times Journalism Institute, TJI. The organisation equally owned 80% stakes in the London based West Africa Magazine, which had a complement of Nigerian and foreign personnel alike.
    Chambers Twentieth Century Dictionary defines a Shaft among others, as a “rotating rod that transmits motion”. If Ogunbiyi’s longstanding nickname was thought to be just another alias, his exertions at the Daily Times lent credence to the appropriateness of the name, as he proved to be the engine room that drove development in the organisation.
    Niyi Osundare’s impressions of the Times before the Ogunbiyi era in the Daily Times as espoused in Dialogue With My Country, (2011), was extremely scathing. In his essay titled: The Ogunbiyi Phenomenon, Osundare says:
    I stopped reading the Times in June 1980 (yes, I am very sure of the date!) I stopped because what before then was the undisputed flagship of Nigerian print journalism had sunk to such an abysmal level of sycophancy and depravity that is soiled even the hands of groundnut sellers whose unpleasant job it was to use its unsold bundles to wrap their ware. Truth rapidly took on a pale, partisan hue. The Times became a pamphlet in which the time-serving gladiators and opportunists of the Second Republic daily stroked their afflicted egos. Rational thought and a genuinely national discourse took leave of its pages. Obituary advertisements took over, bringing in tons of cheap naira, but systematically killing our national dialogue. What used to be a national dialogue became a national insult. (103)
    Ogunbiyi took up the gauntlet and resolved to reverse the trend. Recognising the fact that his vision for a radical turnaround of the fortunes of the organisation could only be steered by a very solid human resource base, Ogunbiyi began the immediate re-organisation of the manpower content of the organisation.
    The Daily Times of Nigeria Plc was not without select top-rated professionals and intellectuals in its editorial arm, though. There were household names like Onyema Ugochukwu, the economist-banker turned journalist who was one of the pioneers of contemporary business journalism, and Farouk Umar Mohammed, who had served variously as Editor and General Manager of the Daily Times.

  • When dancers besieged the Theatre

    When dancers besieged the Theatre

    The Africansa Festival: Theatre Across Borders, staged last week at the National Theatre, Lagos, was part of the activities to usher in Lagos at 50 celebrations, writes Edozie Udeze 

    It was tagged Africansa Festival: Theatre Across Borders and was staged at the National Theatre, Iganmu, Lagos.  The festival, put together by Sarah Boulos, owner and founder of Society for Performing Arts in Nigeria (SPAN) was part of the build up towards Lagos at 50 celebrations.  It was held last weekend amid pomp and pageantry.

    Theatre across borders was an opportunity for young dancers, acrobats, drummers, contemporary and traditional chorographers to display their trade and make the theatre scene aglow to usher in moments of glory for Lagos at 50.  For this, the frontage of the Theatre was used for the show.  For first time in many years, the garden by the entrance to the National Theatre was put to proper use.  The stage was set as artistes mounted the stage to perform their acts.  It was a cool evening, full of all sorts of dances ranging from Salsa to hip-hop, to drumming and more.  With Jo-Jo Body Music as the master of ceremony, it was good to see plenty of young dancers milling around the arena.  They were eager to mount the stage to perform.  For them, music and dance have formed the basic components of their lives.

    Jo-Jo first thanked Boulos for her unalloyed interest in the development of dance among the youths.  “Mrs. Sarah Boulos has made this show possible,” Jo-Jo, known for his peculiar way of using his mouth and body to form music, said.  “Within two weeks, she made this festival possible and for this we have to thank her.  Her Society for Performing Arts in Nigeria has been wonderful to us the younger ones.  The society has been there to groom young dancers in the past twenty years or so,” Jo-Jo said.  As he spoke Boulos who was among the crowd, quietly savouring the aroma of the evening, grinned effusively to acknowledge the accolades being poured on her.  And of course, the audience, made up of mostly the youths cheered and applauded her for her love for dance and musical development in Nigeria.  The razzmatazz was indeed euphoric.

    The first set to mount the stage was called I talk a lot.  The two dancers – male and female – displayed the different stages of love and disappointments in the lives of teenagers.  Love itself is full of pains.  It has its own aura and bliss, yet it is those moments when the confusion to get it right or be dammed stars the youth in the face.  As the two danced and twisted their bodies to the evocative sounds of the music, it said, “I think about you.  I just want to be with you girl.  There are plenty of things we could do together.  We can dance about love, about life; about our dreams”.  The dance itself evoked the passage into puberty, into the world of the unknown when the love of two people is often dictated by the events that await them on the way to the top.

    It was a combination of both contemporary and traditional dance patterns.  The dancers invented stories around life, around the too many worries that confront man on his way up the ladder of life.  Part of the song said – “I wake up to the sneezes of those scenarios.  That is all that I see around me – the struggle to be where I should be continues endlessly”.  Then the man, moved by the soothing voice of the woman, the appealing aura of her body, moved gently to kiss her.  Thus the twists and thorns of love were sealed with this warm kiss of life.  It ended well and the group now nicknamed Stories Performing Arts Theatre, kept the audience spellbound.  It was a beautiful show of love with the proper ingredients of dances in place.

    The next group was the Okide Dongon Bassey comprising mainly of drummers.  With local songs, the group took the audience through the banters of life.  They did acrobatics; they demonstrated the total meaning of life through dance.  As they sang, the people chorused along.  This helped to add more vibes to the rhythm of the evening.  Even some of the guests became restless on their seats, almost eager to take to the dance floor.  The night long show was good.  It afforded many dance troupes and their drummers the opportunity to showcase their works and to prove that dance has come to form an integral part of social life in Nigeria.

    It also showed how much Boulos has been doing to help Nigerian youths live their dreams.  Boulos, a ballet dancer formed SPAN to train young dancers and elevate the profession to an enviable level.  She has groomed many dancers, singers, jazziests and more who are making waves in the world today.

    Apart from making street hip-hop dance popular in Nigeria, she also established SPAN Academy of Jazz and Contemporary Music through which she discovers and trains and empowers young jazziests in the society.  Where necessary, she offers scholarship to some artistes to study music and dance.  She makes young artistes use their own cultural and historical experiences to explore dance ideas.  Today as part of contribution to ensure a successful Lagos at 50, Boulos has put in place the Afficanisa Festival to involve the youths and prosper their trade.

  • Exciting times here as theatre lands on Lagos Island

    Exciting times here as theatre lands on Lagos Island

    In 2004, Mrs Bolanle Austen-Peters, CEO of BAP Productions, founded Terra Kulture to promote Nigerian languages, arts and culture. Penultimate weekend, the lawyer added another feather to her cap when she opened Terra Kulture Arena, a multimillion naira theatre, to resuscitate art and theatre and create jobs for youths, Assistant Editor (Arts) OZOLUA UHAKHEME reports.

    A year ago, many arts enthusiasts and theatre buffs thought it was a minor renovation. But, months later, it became clear that it was more than that, given the magnitude of construction at the site.
    Today, the multimillion naira theatre project has not only provided fresh platform for theatre promotion, it has also become the first private modern theatre with state-of-the-art equipment.
    Another first is that it is built by a woman, Mrs Bolanle Austen-Peters, a lawyer.
    To open the Arena, the management of the theatre dedicated two days, Saturday and Sunday, to hosting patrons of the arts to various performances that included Imela, a dramatised prayer session, drama sketches of scenes from its two major productions, Saro The Musical and Wakaa The Musical; testimonials by some critical stakeholders and slide presentation of stage by stage construction at the Arena.
    It also featured performances by Nigeria’s young musical act, Brymo, who rendered some of his numbers.
    Mrs Austen-Peters said it was difficult to complete the project because the resources were not available. But she had the best team to work with these past years. “But we did it. I believe in the youth and I am passionate about it. I am never bored or tired of the involvement. I thank those who were pushing me too… We have incredible talents in Nigeria. We need more spaces, such as theatre, galleries and production studios to move Nigeria forward,” she said at the opening on Saturday.
    On how the idea of having a 400-seater theatre began barely a year ago, she said: “The journey started about 12 months ago. We have been doing theatre for about seven years and the hall was not adequate and it does not suit the purpose for which we intended. We realised that infrastructure is a challenge and we all recognise that to build any industry we need infrastructure to support it. So, we realised that the best way to move forward in the industry is to build our own space. And that is why we built this.”
    She said idea behind the new theatre was to change the look and feel of theatre, thus taking it to another level. When asked of the cost of the project, she simply replied: ‘’It’s expensive. And I think it will be a boost.’’ However, the old structure housing the restaurant and library will be reworked soon.
    Mrs Austen-Peters is not bothered by the attendant accolades of being the first woman to build a private modern theatre in Lagos. According to her, she has been working hard on the project in the last one year.
    “Honestly, we worked so hard that I don’t have a sense of relief or tiredness, but maybe in a week’s time. The good news is that people are appreciative of the project. And because I have been so involved in it, I have not been able to relive the moment. The beauty of what we have done is that other people will begin to see the value added. And what we can do as a people to bring change to the society. We don’t always have to wait for government. There are lots of us who have much more resources than we do that could have done but did not do.
    “For me, the Arena project is designed to bring art and theatre back to life and creating jobs, which is the most important thing. When you see what we have in store tonight, you will be amazed at the quality and talents that abound in Nigeria. You can only do so much as an individual, but you need infrastructure to support your efforts.
    “I keep saying it that any time you watch a play in Europe, you notice that their actors are not better than our artistes. The difference is that their skills and talents are aided by technology. They have the right stage, right sound and effect. So, if we also invest in these, we will be amazed how far we will go as an industry,” she said.
    She described the commitment and support from other critical stakeholders as a function of perception and belief they have in the brand called Terra Kulture, noting that the ‘beauty of Terra is that we have built a brand.’
    She added: “We have been around for 15 years and so we must be credible to a large extent. It is easier for us to sell our stories and people also see the results of what we do. The Federal Government through the Ministry of Information and Culture has been very supportive.
    “Again, the government is realising that we have a comparative advantage in the arts. And our youths will be better served if we build more arts spaces, theatres like this. That’s why we see Lagos State is building six additional theatres this year. Things can only get better. Government is looking for credible partners and we are looking for credible government, so there is a meeting point. And there is a kind of synergy for the first time.
    “I am happy with Terra as we have been received well. Many thought we were doing small renovations until they saw what we have done, which they found spectacular. The Arena can only make our BAP Productions better. But it is not all about us alone as it will rub off on other productions.”

  • Austen-Peters lauds BoI, as  new Terra Kulture theatre opens

    Austen-Peters lauds BoI, as new Terra Kulture theatre opens

    IT was a memorable day for the art and entertainment industry, last Sunday, when lawyer-turned arts entrepreneur, Bolanle Austen-Peters unveiled the new Terra Kulture theatre, called the Arena.

    The unveiling of the purpose-built 400 state-of-the-art theatre which was supported by the Bank of Industry’s scheme for the creative non-oil sector, played host to politicians, corporate Nigeria, artistes and entertainment promoters in a potpourri of exciting shows that hint of what to expect of the Arena, going forward.

    Guests at the two-show event include, Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, Lagos State Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Mr. Steve Ayorinde, Prof. Pat Utomi, Atedo Peterside, Femi Gbajabiamila, Olu Jacob and Joke Silva, Prof. Ademola Abass, Mrs. Cynthia Nwuka, Group Head, Creative Industry Desk at BoI, Tade Ogidan, Mahmood Ali-Balogun, AMAA Founder, Peace Anyiam-Osigwe, Yinka Davies, Jahman Anikulapo, Teju Kareem, Kunle Afolayan and evicted Big Brother Naija housemate, Tony Offiong among others.

    Speaking to journalists at the event, Austen-Peters recalled that she delved in theatre business 15 years ago, and was inspired to take it to the next level by beating infrastructure challenges of stage, lighting, sound etc, as a way of extending the Terra Kulture space to accommodate the theatre Arena.

    “To showcase talent, you have to deal with the right infrastructures, otherwise we’ll keep saying our people are not talented, but in reality they are. So, it was important for us to increase our space so we can do it at the best level,” she said.

    She noted that the Arena has brought more jobs for the youths, saying that, “For each production, we have over a hundred people. We have cast, the light guys, the sound guys, costume people are about 15, we have three sets; the dancers, the artistes and the technicians.”

    The Terra Kulture boss praised Bank of Industry for their support of her projects. “When we went to London with ‘Waka-The Musical’, they sponsored us, and then when we wanted a loan facility as well, they gave it to us. They have an incredible team of professionals. They keep to the letter. And operate in a very friendly atmosphere. I do admire them, very professional efficient.”

    On why the bank is supporting arts and entertainment, Mr. Waheed Olagunju, Acting managing Director of Bank of Industry, said his institution is created to support any potentially viable initiative that would contribute to Nigeria’s GDP. “In 2013, the creative economy accounted for 1.6 percent of our GDP which is a vindication of Bank of Industry’s optimism in terms of the potentials of Nigeria and Nigerians in the creative economy. And that was why we set up the creative economic desk some 10 years ago to support our talents, our artistes to realise their potentials, and then of course to be able to convert their talents into good business models and then, hopefully, coming up with potentially viable business plans that we can support – ones that can attract both debt and equity. We play in the debt space as a lending institution and we’ve lent to a number of them in recent times and they’ve done quite well.”

    Olagunju expressed optimism that “Terra Kulture would also do well because this initiative is one of the best in the world; not just in Nigeria or Africa. Because we watched her grow in Nigeria, we have also seen her perform on the international scene.”

    He recalled that Bolanle Austen-Peters Production, Waka-The Musical was successful the last time it was taken to London. “And we believe that she can do a lot more in the global space, and through her activities, she is helping to build positive image for Nigeria, which is a prerequisite for building confidence of domestic and foreign investors in Nigeria,” he said.

    Continuing, the BoL boss noted that Austen-Peters is also helping to mobilise foreign direct investments into Nigeria. “Because it is when investors have a positive perception of the market that they will venture to go into the market. When it’s negative, they would not. But through her activities, she is helping to enhance Nigeria’s image abroad. Which, like I said earlier, is a prerequisite for building confidence. Investors will come, not only into the creative economy but other sectors of the Nigerian economy because through her performances, she is able to tell a lot of positive stories about Nigeria, the people of the country, the culture and in the process she is also exposing other potentials of Nigeria. This is very crucial for taking investment decisions.”

    Anchored by IK Osakioduwa, the show opened with performances by Lagos Modern Orchestra, led by the in-house music director, Seun Owoaje.

    Guests were also treated to sense from Saro – The Musical, Wakaa – The Musical, a South African performance as well as skits from the London events. Popular Afro singer, Brymo who did some of the theme songs for the plays performed his hit song, “Waka Waka” to thunderous applause at the show.

    The Arena promises regular weekend and festive stage productions, with the behind-the-scene lifestyle of late Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, titled Fela and the Kalakuta Girls, billed for December.

  • Theatre rises against corruption

    Theatre rises against corruption

    Fake claims, ego, arrogance, emptiness and greed characterise the relationship between a politician business man, Paulinus, and his lover girl in Thespian Family Theatre and Productions’ new play Beyond The Garb running at the Cinema Hall One, National Theatre, Iganmu, Lagos.
    Written and directed by Ayo Jaiyesimi and assisted by Stage Marshal Nissi George, Beyond The Garb mirrors the larger society, especially corporate bodies and individuals’ actions and inactions that threaten the survival of social norms and values. It is a rich production of music, dance, song and drama. The banter is humorous and rib-cracking, but underlying this are salient topics and conversations that tug at the cord of national citizenship.
    The 70-minute total theatre performance, according to Jaiyesimi, is one way to key into the change initiative in the fight against corruption in the country. “Except we look inward and allow the change to start from us, we will not be able to make progress. The play for now is deliberate considering the time we are. For instance, we are quick at pointing accusing fingers at others such as the police on the road, but we don’t examine ourselves. So, we are using theatre to look at the fight against corruption via persuasion,” she said at a preview session in Lagos.
    Of all the scenes in the play, the one that shows the police encounter with Paulinus (Omololu Sodiya) and his lover girl and the intervention of a fake prophet captures the many prophecies and deceits of our time. Also, the get-rich- quick syndrome by some Nigerians is reflected in the attitudes of the police who surrenders his loot from the road block to a fake prophet in order to make it big. However, all these were passed across to the audience with lots of humour. Musical interludes featuring songs and dances drawn from major ethnic groups spiced the presentation. Among the casts are Michael George, Samuel Perry, Stanley Okeke, Teco Austin, Owumi Ugbeye, Joy Amata, Adesina Adejoke, Agunpopo Olamide and Victor Sunday.
    Beyond The Garb, which opened on Saturday at the National Theatre, will be on stage from March 25 to 27, a special command performance in commemoration of World Theatre Day 2017.