He has been regarded as a rebel in
different quarters for his supposed anti-progressive stand on the
Actors’ Guild of Nigeria, but in this interview, the Imo state born
actor talks extensively about Nollywood, why he feels misunderstood by
colleagues, and his plans for the guild.
Let’s start with your chieftaincy
title. Why do you think you were made Ezekwesili in Anambra state, far
from your home state of Imo?
I don’t know exactly what it is but
perhaps it is in recognition of my efforts to make things better. It was
not until I took the title home that I discovered I’m from a royal
family too, although I didn’t get the title from my place. My father is
the Opara-di-Opara (the man that gets to have the first anything in that
community) of my village in Imo state.
What are the effects having this title has had on you?
Nothing has changed. I have just become
more socially responsible and responsive to the society, humanity. It
also gave me a leadership frame and helped me see myself as someone with
a class of respect.
What is your take on traditional rulers in Nigeria?
I don’t have anything against
traditional authority in any way. Whatever promotes humanity and
redefines life are the things I want to be part of and support. If being
a king will add value to humanity, I think it is my passion.
Away from that, why are you yet to return to the movies?
I’m not the only one who is missing in
action. A lot of us are but perhaps I get noticed more because maybe I
am most loved. We all parade ourselves as stars but we know stars have
levels. Away from that, I am not the only one involved. Have you
bothered to ask when last you heard of Oba Iweka road or of Idumota or
Pound road in Aba? That was the last time we stopped being paid.
How do you mean?
As you can see, the investors in the
movie industry (Bayowa Films, Remmy Jes, Kas Vid) have been run over by
the TV houses, no thanks to some of my colleagues. Nollywood has been
taken over and it is evident.
Did some players in the movie industry know about this alleged takeover?
Of course they did. They sold out to the
TV houses and that has become the Nollywood we now talk about.
Nollywood now exists only on Africa Magic, owned by South Africans.
Meanwhile, while we were struggling to put the industry together, they
(South African investors) were not around, but now they show our
Nollywood movies and play their country’s soundtrack. They go as far as
try to bring up their new faces and play him up with a stupid star and
try to create a somebody out of him. That way they are building their
stars, Jacob’s Cross, Tinsel and so on.
What efforts were made to preserve Nollywood’s integrity?
At a time, Charles Novia came boldly to
say that very soon all the stars would be gone. This was because he knew
what they had done. They had mortgaged the future of the industry
making cheap benefits. There was a time we attended a conference in
South Africa and these people (South Africans) were inquisitive, probing
and wanting to know about how we make our movies. While I was speaking
like a patriotic Nigerian, arguing against letting our strategies out,
some of my colleagues quietly sold out, exchanging cards and numbers
with them. Unknown to them, they were selling out. When I said then that
Africa Magic was ripping actors and producers off, people said I was
crazy, some of my colleagues were paid to put up words against my claim.
Now, plenty of them have been forced out of the job, because people who
pay and invest in the movies are no longer in business.
Were the Actors Guild of Nigeria, Association of Movie Producers and Directors Guild of Nigeria not aware of these developments?
It got to a point all efforts to salvage
the situation became impossible because there was so much politicking
going on. First, their content provider, Emeka Mba was lobbied to
becoming the DG of the Censorship board, not forgetting he was one of
those who brought them into Nigeria. Mba’s position paved the way for
them and made their business smooth. They needed to close down Nollywood
to make TV more viable than it was, and that was when Emeka came up
with the idea of every producer paying a sum of five million naira
before their movies could get to the market. That was how it started and
gradually some started falling off and a lot more were arrested for
defaulting. Till tomorrow, I will keep calling Emeka Mba a criminal and
I’ll never forgive [him] because he destroyed the interest of the
industry for personal reasons. He was one of those who owned HITV, but
shame on him.
Apart from job loss, what other impact has this alleged invasion caused Nollywood?
A lot, and most are negative. Now there
is no more Infinity Merchandise, P. Collins, O.C Affassons and other big
names we knew in those days. Places where Nollywood movies were readily
available, like Idumota, Oba Iweka road, and Pound road, Aba have been
shut down, leaving only Alaba in existence. Alaba; a place we all, as an
industry, tried to close down. The invasion has been on for a long
time, it has put the industry in a state of coma, and has finally killed
it. Nollywood is dead and this is so because we are never going to have
a big producer roll out money anymore or visioneers bring out money to
invest. What we are going to keep having are scallywags and cheap
production assistants running around to see how to put ten faces
together and see if they can make at least fifteen thousand jacket
sales.
But some of your colleagues seem to
be enjoying the industry despite the challenges you have mentioned.
Where does this place you?
They are not asking the right questions.
I stood as Emeka Ike and made over a million jacket sales, only me,
without putting twenty actors on one jacket. The cheap illiterates
amongst my colleagues antagonize me, and I don’t blame them; I blame
myself for mingling with them. I look at most of them (colleagues) and I
begin to imagine the content in most of them. Most of them wear dark
shades and parade themselves like they are more than they are. What are
they worth when they don’t even know their rights in the industry, but
go about posing on red carpets with dark shades and speak [with] some
accent that was never properly learnt? All those are cheap ways of life.
These guys don’t ask questions about what we are doing as a guild or an
industry, and the few that do are labelled troublemakers. That is the
mentality in Nigeria. Gani Fawehinmi was seen as a trouble maker till he
died, same as Fela. These are the people who bring about change in
their communities.
You vied to become president of AGN, but lost. If you had won, what would have been your focal point?
I am still the president of AGN, the
legal president, but because of my stand, it is difficult to let men
like me survive it, because if we do, we will destroy these evil men who
run the system. The same thing is applicable in the wider world;
responsible men are running away from politics, which is why a lot of
riff-raffs are making headway in it. We need to redefine what value is
to us. It’s not the dark shades and the glittering dresses but what adds
to humanity, and we should be able to draw the line between what is
value and what is not.
What is your take on Ibinabo Fiberisima as president of the guild?
Her swearing in was illegal. How can she
be president? Please tell me. There is a court case yet to be settled
involving myself and Segun Arinze. How then can he conduct an election?
Again, Ibinabo has not been cleared with the police. I don’t know what
is happening. Are these things supposed to be? The president ordered
that all recipients of national honours that have criminal records
should be stripped of them, and that is how it should be. We should run
things right, at least for the sake of our children and ones yet unborn.
What would you say the guild is lacking?
Leadership. We have everything right
now, and the few idiots that discovered this have quickly gone to
register the guild as their personal companies. Do you even know that
the AGN was originally registered as a company for individuals with just
five board of trustee members? Most people don’t know this fact,
including my colleagues. These are the things we are fighting against.
While fighting to remove these guys, they appointed Segun (Arinze) as
their president. I challenged this and took them to court but they broke
the court’s injunction and conducted another election. You see the
gimmicking of old politicians? That is what we are fighting, not Segun
Arinze. He is my friend, so is Ibinabo, but we have to do right thing in
this country; that is the only way a future can be built.
When did these problems begin for Nollywood?
It [has been] from the beginning. I’m
sure not many know that the first president of AGN, Remmy Jes, was
flogged out of office by the board of trustees. They used cultism and
all other means. This is painful for me because I am one of those that
fought for the name. When you say Nollywood, you can’t leave Emeka Ike
out of it. I can’t keep quiet, although a lot of people may because they
are scared for their careers, but I am a leader and will be their
spokesman. People like me, who have the goodwill of the country at heart
should not be afraid of coming out.
On a final note, Nollywood will be 21 this year. What do you think about its’ direction?
Nollywood is not going in the right
direction, People saying that are people who are just happy that they
have benefited from it. How can you say an industry that has its
structure destroyed is in the right direction? We already made an
impression on the world. All that was left was the technical know-how
and government empowering us. We couldn’t get that, but rather got big
foreigners who hijacked the gold from us.
Source: Nigerian Entertainment
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