Tag: Yaw

  • Yaw marks birthday with throwback photo

    Yaw marks birthday with throwback photo

    Celebrated Nigerian OAP, actor and compere, Steve Onu, aka Yaw was a year older yesterday and for him, it was a time for sober reflection.

    The Wazobia FM presenter, who arrived London on Saturday, started receiving felicitations from his fans, friends and fellow entertainers from the early hours of Sunday.

    However, making ‘his day’ impressionable, the entertainer, in a few words, reflects on his life, especially as it pertains success, conviction and confidence.

    He posted a photograph of himself as an infant, placed beside his present adult image, with the caption; “Sometimes we may ask God for success, and He gives us physical and mental stamina. We might plead for prosperity, and we receive enlarged perspective and increased patience, or we petition for growth and are blessed with the gift of grace.

    “He may bestow upon us conviction and confideconfidence as we strive to achieve worthy goals.

    “Happy birthday to me,” he said on Instagram.

  • Entertainers gear up for Yaw Live on Stage

    Entertainers gear up for Yaw Live on Stage

    YAWNAIJA Entertainment is back with its annual show, Yaw Live on Stage. This year, according to information, the show will feature radio presenter, Steve Onu, aka Yaw and Okey Bakassi in a stage play, titled YOU.

    Written by Obi Martins and directed by Emma Uduma, the show comes up on Sunday, May 31 and will hold at the popular Eko Hotel & Suites, Victoria Island. Lagos.

    Shola Animashaun (former Boy Alinco), Olamide and others are set to thrill fans with a huge show that will comprise of stage play, dance, poetry, music and comedy.

    The 2014 show, according to report recorded a huge success, well attended by celebrities and fans. Also in attendance was the wife of the Governor of Lagos State, Dame Abimbola Fashola and some of her aides.

  • Artistes gather for Yaw  in The Street

    Artistes gather for Yaw in The Street

    POPULAR On-Air Personality Steve Onu a.k.a. Yaw, will put up another satire, titled: The Street, at the prestigious Eko Hotel and Suites, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    The Street, which is written by Obi Martins, is directed by Emma Uduma and presented by Yawnaija Entertainment.

    Yaw, the producer of April Fool, Last Molue and The Bar, will engage the audience in sessions of fun with Julius ‘D Genius’ Agwu, among others.

    The show will also feature Crown Troupe of Africa, Timaya, M.I, Reminisce, Sean Tizzle, Dr. Sid, Timi Dakolo, Kcee, Iyanya, IllBliss, Chidinma, Harrysong, Phyno, Sound Sultan, Waje, Solidstar and more.

    As these wave-making acts give outstanding performances, leading stand-up comedians like Ali Baba, Okey Bakassi, MC Abbey, Koffi, Owen Gee, Tee A, Senator, Omobaba, Akpororo, Funnybone and Gbenga Adeyinka will thrill with jokes.

    The event is being supported by Lekki Garden, Cool TV, We-TV, Wazobia FM, Cool FM, Nigerian Info, Wap TV, TVC, Eko Hotel and Suites, Lasaa, Black House Media, Bigtimi, HIP TV and Flytime Promotions.

    Yaw, who holds a degree in Theatre Arts from the Lagos State University, Ojo, has put in over 14 years in acting. He has also done a few home videos and over 50 plays in Nigeria and the United Kingdom.

    Yaw, who joined Wazobia FM in 2007, is the producer of Yaw N Myn running on local and satellite TV stations.

  • I don’t care about popularity

    I don’t care about popularity

    Beautiful On-Air personality, Mayowa Lambe, co-host of Make Una Wake Up show with Yaw and Lolo1, has made her mark on the airwaves with what she loves to do. She is quite a handful, with interest not only in broadcast; she is into make-up, acting and other stuffs. In this interview with DUPE AYINLA-OLASUKANMI, she speaks on her life, career and other issues.

    APART from broadcast, what other things do you do?

    Apart from my morning and weekend shows which I co-host with Yaw and Lolo. I am also into a bit of movies and TV presenting too. But most of the TV presentations don’t show here in Nigeria because I have my own reasons.

    Why are your TV presenting not shown here?

    Ok, I will give you the reason. It is because I am a very private person. I don’t like people to pry into my personal life, because I have things going on. So I will like to do my things in a way that I won’t be noticed when I go out. Sometimes when I go to people for some things, I need to know that I got them on merits and I do not want people prying into it and guessing what my life is like. I don’t enjoy it, so I try as much as possible to keep myself away from the eyes of the public. So the negative side does not affect me, because I am a very emotional person.

    Let’s talk about your love for stage play

    I enjoy very good and beautiful plays. So I am not a big fan of the movies. I watch movies, but Nigerian movies I am not exactly a big fan of, because I believe there is something wrong somewhere and they are still trying to get there. I watch it and criticise it a lot. I enjoy stage play, because it is difficult. I do a bit of acting, I just started and I have done a series titled 24/7. It will be showing on DSTV, MNET. We are done with the season 1 and hopefully if it gets better, we will move on to season 2. My point is I love theatre because it is only intelligent people that can do it. You have to get your lines, it is given. It is either you get it, or you don’t. And if you miss it, you have to find a way to substitute from your head. So it has to be intelligent, it has to be smart. I enjoy it because you can actually see the effort people are making. But even if it is not so nice, you can appreciate them for the effort.

    I learnt you love make-up too?

    Yes. I also do a bit of costuming, which comes under make-up too. At times when Katherine, Lolo, and even Yaw want to go out, they ask my opinion on how they look. Because I studied it a little bit. I don’t do it in a big way, but I do it for my friends. And I just do it, because I love to see people look good, go out and take pictures. Since I won’t do it, they tell people Mayowa Lambe dressed me up. It makes me feel good, when I see what I have done. So when Katherine asked me if I was going to do the cast of Pepper Soup costume, I didn’t even say yes or no. I just asked, when is rehearsal? It was exciting and it is a very beautiful experience.

    How do you manage your privacy, being an OAP?

    I will tell you how I do it. Being an On-Air personality, you see, radio does not give you that immediate popularity with your face. A lot of people know my name, inside and outside Lagos, you will be amazed. But they don’t even know what I look like. Sometimes I am somewhere and they are talking about me and I just walk away. I am not exaggerating. It happens a lot of times, especially with radio people. My point is you can shield yourself away from the eyes of the public; you can go and get MC and advertising jobs by yourself by going to agencies. You don’t have to tell the press for every time you get a new house, when you are about to get married, do a birthday party, you don’t have to appear on every red carpet, and you don’t have to be every show and get noticed. So you can shield yourself away from it, if you don’t want it. For me, as long as I am making good and legal money, I don’t care about the popularity. It is not important to me. I would rather live my life simply and accomplish a lot of things, without having to worry about I cannot drive my car today. And I cannot go in a bus because someone will recognise me. I want to live simply like every other normal person. So I can live within my means and budget and not have a problem.

    When you are not busy, what do you do?

    I love being with my friends. I don’t have a whole lot of them, but I have Omotunde, Katherine are two of my best friends. We are pretty very close. I can drive over to her place or drag her over to my place and we can cook together and talk about things. I don’t like to be alone, so I like to be in the company of my friends when they are not busy. Because I respect and understand that they are busy too. Sometimes, I have Katherine’s kids over, I help her look after them. For me, it is fun, I love family. That alone, for me, is fun.

    When did the flair for acting start?

    I’ve wanted to go into acting for a very long time. A lot of people tell me; oh you’ve got the gift. I have gone to watch people do stage plays and when they don’t come on time, I would be asked to fill in for them. And people would be like, you interpret very well. Before now, I wanted to take my time and watch people; someone I love so much in the Nigerian movie industry is Joke Silva. I love the way she delivers her lines, her gesture and facial expression. So I took my time to see if I could get it right. The first time I did it, the director asked if I have been acting for a while. I said to him no, because I delivered my lines so well. He didn’t have to ask me to do it over and over again. I learnt from people who are good at this thing. You can never stop learning.

    How would you describe your experience so far?

    It was an experience that is all I can say.

  • ‘I can’t trade my  career for  something else’

    ‘I can’t trade my career for something else’

    YOU are currently working with a young aspiring Director. What attracted you to him?

    He is not that young, he is seasoned. There is nothing new or strange about it too. First and foremost I studied theatre art and he was my junior in school. So when I was called to take part in one of his production, I just felt it was a good idea. Being that it has been long that I have done stage plays, apart from the one I was producing myself, I also wanted to work with someone else. That did it. I am happy I am doing it.

    You have so many things on hand presently. Is one not going to suffer for the other?

    Everything works together, it is just timing. I just need to do some other things and make sure I balance them. For my TV programme, I have done what I have to do. I have some other concepts that I want to do later this year but it is no longer the same with what I used to do. That one is settled, because I won’t be shooting again until next year. The new one, I will shoot sometime around April. Subsequently I have other things too but everything is timing for me. They are all programmed already, I mean from now till December.

    Let’s talk about Yaw as a family man?

    (Laughs) It is just Yaw.

    What is the concept behind Yaw N Myn?

    The idea came about in 2009. Then I had a stage play that I did and the returns were not encouraging. My friends just said to me why spend so much money trying to do stage plays and you don’t get your money back. When you can use that money to do a film or TV programme and reap something. I said to myself, I have been thinking of wanting to do a TV programme, let’s see how it goes. Gradually the idea came, but I did not do anything about it. That was how it started. It is just about Yaw, the radio presenter and stuff that I do once from work. Some of the storylines are real life situations, some of the things that have happened to me. I just narrate to the writers and they just go ahead to write. And we have good scripts.

    Why the introduction of guest artistes?

    I have had lots of people coming on board. People like Ifeaoma Ejenebor, Pasuma, RMD, Sound Sultan, Susan Peter, Empress Njamah, Wale Sango and lots more. After shooting the first season, definitely you have to do something different when shooting the next. So it was from the second season that I had to add people up to come play cameo and all that. Then it was the way the story lines were written. Like the Pasuma episode, it was specially written for him. I told the writers from the onset that if they feel there is anyone who will make the storyline better, they should just infuse the person and I will get in touch with the person to come and act.

    How did you cope with Ngozi Nwosu’s character?

    Her character is about my grand mom. For a lot of us, our grandparents didn’t go to school. They don’t know how to speak English so that is where I brought in Ngozi. She was an uneducated person who understands a little English. She comes every now and then to visit us in the house. Her character did not die. She came visiting when we were shooting one of the episodes of the second season. She is okay now. She came because she wanted act but I told her to take it easy.

    The scriptwriter had already written about four episodes for her before I told them to stop writing for again. Then, she told me she was travelling some months back for her check up and that she had to go every now and then so I didn’t want to stress her. I told myself that when she comes back, we will start from where she stopped. But she is good, because she spent enough time with us on set before heading back home.

    One entertainer recently got a car worth N30 million. What is your take on entertainers spending lavishly on cars?

    Cars are meant for people to buy and not for spirits. That is just what I think. If Mr. A can buy it, why can’t a comedian buy it too? If you have the money to buy it then go for it. Everybody has got his or her priority. It is what you place as number one that is number one for you. I don’t think I have a problem with it. I am indifferent about it. If I have such amount of money, I probably would invest in my production that I am doing.

    But these people ask for help when something comes up. People have been asking; why can’t they save for their future?

    That is one bad thing about entertainers. And I don’t think it is just here alone. Even some in America have been in the same situation; someone like MC Hammer today is broke. There was a time they said Mike Tyson was in debt. I think the wise ones among them would invest, which is the most important thing. They live reckless lives, they drink, smoke and do a lot of other things and they don’t consider their health. I think everybody has got what they place as priority. Pertaining to kidney failure, if you have enough money to take care of yourself, you can drink and smoke and live your reckless life because the money will be there to take care of yourself afterwards. It is when you don’t now have that I have a problem with it.

    Was there any time in your line of career that you decided to go for something else?

    I can never trade my career for something else. I would rather spread out to do other things. I started as an actor in 1995 with home videos. From there I went to school to study Theatre Arts. Along the line, I started doing stuff with BBC. Then I took part in Twilight Zone, Flatmates, Fuji House of Commotion and lot of other productions. I came into radio fully with Wazobia after which I decided to go back to TV to start doing my own thing. What I mean by spread out is that I still do stage plays, I anchor and package events. I think everything around me is centred on entertainment. Now I am planning to start shooting short films. I am also planning to go to school to study film. I am expanding but I am still in entertainment.

    Let’s go back to the days of Flatmates. Are there any plans to bring the production back?

    I was talking to Kayode Peters, the producer and he said he is making plans to do that, to have some of us, come back to do something different. It might not necessary be called Flatmates this time because everybody is big now, busy doing their own thing. When we were doing Flatmates, we were broke.

    Those were the characters. If you try to act broke and you have added weight, people would be like, who are you deceiving? So he said he has intention of bringing back, in particular the characters of Flatmates. We are waiting for him. Okechukwu Chima is in UK. Once we get there, we might try to record one or two scenes. And when we come back to Nigeria, we will continue with the one we are doing. And we still keep in touch with each other.

    Apart from the sitcom do you have any other project on hand?

    Yes, but when it is time, you will know. I don’t want to let the cat out of the bag. Let me just leave it at that. I am working on some other projects, which before the year runs out will hit the TV stations. Presently, I am recording, shooting and gathering contents.

    How do you relax, when you are not at work?

    I am a home person. I just sit at home and listen to the news, current affairs, basically things happening around me. I am not the outgoing type but when I feel like it, I go out. I am not the club type. I sit at home and just try to rest.

  • Death is not  peculiar to the  entertainment   industry—Yaw

    Death is not peculiar to the entertainment industry—Yaw

    Consummate entertainer, Steve Onu, popularly called Yaw, has come a long way in the Nigerian entertainment industry. The On-Air Personality with Wazobia FM and star actor of the rested soaps, Twilight Zone and Flat Mates, has evolved over the years into a brand in showbiz.

    In this chat with MERCY MICHAEL, Yaw, who features versatile actress Funke Akindele in his Yaw Live on Stage comedy show, The Bar, speaks passionately about his love for acting, the challenges and his comedy show.

     

    TELL us all about The bar. It’s a satire basically. It’s a two-man play. Don’t be deceived by the flyer. It’s just Funke Akindele and I. The others will just entertain in what they know how to do best but every year I do a two-man stage play. In the past, I’ve done with Jude Orhorha, Owen Gee, MC Abbey, Koffi, but this year I’m doing it with Funke Akindele.

    Why the choice of Funke?

    Because she’s got the blend of craziness that I actually need and she’s versatile. You know, a lot of people don’t believe she can speak English. I was speaking to her yesterday and I told her a lot of people believe she’s coming to do Jenifa. Unknown to them, she’s coming to do something totally different.

    Is this a political satire?

    To an extent it’s a political satire. It centres on what has been happening in Nigeria from 2012 to 2013. Just everything that has been happening all this while; we’ll talk about it in a way that will make people laugh while at the same time pass a message.

    Radio seems to have overshadowed your love for acting…

    My problem is with timing. I was speaking to a director recently and that was the same thing we talked about. I told him that the problem I’m facing is time. You want to go shoot a movie; they say come to location at 8am. You get there at 8am, you don’t start to shoot till 2pm. They tell you, you are going to shoot for only four days, at the end of the day you end up shooting for seven days.

    It appears that you are not as passionate about acting as you are with radio?

    I am very passionate about acting. I just shot my TV programme called Yours and Mine. It will start to air from March 8. It will be aired every Friday on LTV and Tuesdays on TVC. Acting is my life. Even when I talk on radio I act. I do stuff for BBC and if BBC will need you for five days they will book you down for eight or ten days, bearing in mind that anything can happen but our productions are not like that.

    If they want to shoot, they will tell you we are just shooting you for only two days, but at the end of the day you will stay more days than you were booked for. I was supposed to be in the movie Mr. and Mrs. I was supposed to be the other guy. You know Joseph Benjamin was the rich mean guy. I was supposed to be the so called good guy, but it was the same issue of time that squashed that plan.

    They said I had to come to Abuja. I asked them how many days I was going to be shooting. They said at least four days. Now if I have to be taking permission from work it has to be that four days because I can’t take permission for four days and I’m staying eight days. It’s not right. And true to my fears, they spent more than the four days I was supposed to shoot. I didn’t go but when I asked, I was told they spent more than four days. So if I had gone to do it and then I tell the producer or director that, ‘sorry I can’t spend beyond four days,’ that I must go back. Of course, I would look like I’m not being considerate or I’m adding to the challenges they are already facing.

    So, would you ever quit radio to be able to fit into the challenges of timing in Nollywood?

    I think with time it is getting better. I don’t think it will continue like this forever. I want to believe that with time it will get better. Like the producer that was talking to me two or three days back, I told him that my problem is time. My station will give me the opportunity to go but I cannot tell my station that I will be away for five days and then under five days, you’ve not finished. It is the movie mentality. If they want to come and record in this building for instance, they will tell you that, “we are recording for only two hours sir.”

    Meanwhile, for the next four, five hours they’ve not finished and yet they would have told you that they are recording for only two hours. For this play, we did a skit, myself and Funke. We shot it in a hotel in Ikeja. The man asked me how long we would be spending. I knew I was recording two skits; I told the man that I would spend six hours. He said six hours is too much, so I asked him if he would prefer I lied to him.

    In your own production, do you avoid this issue of timing?

    I try to. When I was shooting my TV programme titled Yours and Mine last April, if not that I fell ill, I had chicken pox which made me stop shooting and everybody saw it, I would have finished shooting within the time frame that I set. I asked the director how many days it would take him to shoot and he said it would take him ten days. I said fine, I’m telling all my cast and crew that we are shooting for fourteen days bearing in mind that someone might have a reason not to be around when we are ready. All those things have to be put into consideration.

    Could it also be that the reason you are not ready to stick out your neck for acting is because it’s not lucrative enough?

    I think it’s more of the pleasure. That’s why I want to still come back to act. That’s what I love to do. But if it’s about putting food on my table, I don’t know. Maybe it is for other people. But I don’t think so. I don’t think it’s actually putting food on the tables of many of us. For me, it’s just for the love of it. That’s why I’ve stayed glued to it.

    What are television soaps like?

    Twilight Zone and Flat Mates was crazy. Then, there were not much TV soaps and all that. I think that was the only programme on TV for young people and a lot of people actually liked it. It was good. A lot of people still make reference to it till date. I was with Kanu Nwankwo when we went for the Olympics, and he asked why we stopped Flat Mates. I guess most of us just went on to other things.

    Would you do Flat Mates again if you are cast for it?

    Yes I would, but I don’t think it would happen. I think the storyline would change because it’s difficult now removing those actors from what we are today. Basketmouth is already big. I am at my own level, so is Kayode Peters. It might not really be easy. Besides, people will now look at it like, “What is wrong with these old men? Abeg make una leave this thing for small boys to do.” That’s what I think. But Kayode is working on something, trying to do a reloaded kind of thing. Everybody is now big. We just pick it up from that angle. That was what Kayode said.

    Did you find radio or radio found you?

    No, no, no Wazobia started in November, I joined them in December. But I think I contributed in building what the station should look and sound like, yeah! I’m not sure they wanted humour at the early stage but maybe because I came in, so my MD made it a point of duty that you must be humourous to be able to work in Wazobia. If you are not humourous you cannot work there.

    So what’s your background?

    I did Theatre Arts at the Lagos State University, Ojo. And that was when? I did my diploma sometime in 1995. E never too tey (laughs).

    As an on-air personality, did you ever encounter Goldie before her death?

    No, not much. She came to Cool Fm, which was after Big Brother. I think that was the last time she came. Except if she came on some other shows I don’t know about. Like I’m not in the studio right now, so I don’t know who and who is there. But I knew on the day she passed on she was supposed to come to Cool Fm the evening of that day, February 14.

    She was supposed to come on Freeze’s show to come and talk about the Grammy experience and what’s new. That was after she had done the two singles. She was supposed to come, but I never had a close encounter with her.

    Fears have been raised about the constant deaths in the entertainment industry. What’s your take on it?

    I think a lot of people would say the entertainment industry needs to pray, I’m not ruling that out. I think it’s important that they do, but another thing I would say is that just like people die in the entertainment industry, people die in other sectors but maybe because they are popular, they are public figures, people know them; that is why you think that theirs is worse. I’m sure if you go to the banking industry in the whole of Nigeria I’m sure you will see one banker that died today or yesterday, so it’s like that.

    That’s the way I want to see it but I’m sure it’s also very important that we pray and rededicate ourselves to God because the position that we are is not like every other man on the street. Please permit to say that. Let me just give you a simple example. I remember when they did the ‘Abacha one million man match’, the youth earnestly asked for Abacha, if you remember. Shina Peters was one of those that performed for him. Now he went to Ife to perform and students yapped him. They were shouting at him to get out. He had to prostrate to beg them that he was sorry for going to sing for Abacha. He was castigated for a long time. Then I looked at it, when Abacha was alive, there would have been times when he was sick, and doctors attended to him, taking care of him. Who is castigating those doctors? Nobody.

    Now, they said the Abacha’s family embezzled money but lawyers are still standing for them in court. Who is castigating those lawyers? Nobody! But if an entertainer endorses any of those people haaaaaa!!! He or she is castigated and I don’t know why. It means our position is different from everyone else. So it’s very important that entertainers should do things and do them right. Let’s be careful with the things we do and steps we take. If a man slaps a woman it is nothing but let an actor slap a woman, it is news. It means that we occupy a delicate position and it should be guarded. So prayer is very important in our industry.

    As a humour merchant, will standup comedy come later?

    I think we all have our strengths. Babasala was not a comedian. Ibu is not a standup comedian. Nkem Owoh is not a standup comedian. I don’t know if you get me. Dele Odule is not a standup comedian. These people are comic actors but that doesn’t also mean they can’t handle the mic. I just think I understand my own market and I’m just following it squarely. I anchor events, I crack jokes at event. It works well for me.

    How do you handle your female fans?

    You can’t run away from female fans. There is nothing you can do about it. Women make the world go round so you must learn to relate with them. Even if you bring them close you must learn to keep them at arm’s length. Let me give you an example. When you go to a club, it’s usually free for the ladies. So what that means is that without the ladies the men won’t come there. So you must just learn to walk around it.

    Tell us about your ordeal with a female fan if you have any?

    There was a time a lady came to my office with my name “Yaw” tattooed on her waist. She said that is the extent to which she loves me. I was shocked. I’ve never seen her before and she tattooed my name on her waist! That’s madness! I just left and told the security people to chase her away.

    Are you the typical African man who doesn’t believe a woman should express her feelings to a man?

    Of course I believe… I don’t have a problem with that. It happens but not to that extent. That is going to the extreme.

    What are your plans for 2013?

    Apart from The Bar, coming up very soon, written by Obe Martins there is the TV programme Yours and Mine which will start showing from March.

    How did you spend the Valentine?

    I was in a meeting. I went for a meeting.

    Are you married?

    I’m involved. Work come first for me in everything I do. Besides, I have a show. Every day is love for me. But that apart I had a meeting on that day and it was important I went because of my show.