Archive for entertainment

Haiti triumphs after all

Haiti triumphs after all

If the February 8
Barbican performance of the Creole Choir of Cuba were to be described
in one word, it would be called ‘Triumph’. A triumph that derives from
weathered collective challenges like slavery, displacement, bad
governance and natural disasters; and on this occasion, the barrier of
language.

The Creole Choir of
Cuba is a harmonious union of sages with voices raised in their native
tongue to tell the world their communal history. The Choir is more than
10 individuals wielding musical notes and percussion instruments; it is
a projection of bravery, endurance, talent and warmth.

Beyond language

The stage was laid
out simply, with no busy background accoutrements to distract the
audience; the choir of six women and four men dressed in simple, loose
fitting traditional attire was the cynosure of eyes. And from the very
first song, ‘Mangaje’, which with powerful solo and back-up acapella
recounts the disillusionment of African slaves in the new world, the
audience is transported to a temporal space where not words but emotion
is the Lingua-Franca.

The predominantly
white audience was given more than a glimpse of the soul of these
Haitian descendants of Cuba, who rendered one melody after the other
with remarkable flourish and verve; undeterred that a majority of their
listeners did not understand the language.

Perhaps because of
this, their faces, bodies, and movements reached where their vocal
expressions could not. They swayed, crouched, danced, mimed, pumped the
air in defiance or waved in victory. We heard in dirges, chants,
invocations, and laments as one story after another of pain, loss,
injustice and suffering was told with alternating emotions.

Mundane themes such
as the loneliness of a cattle drover travelling at dusk are woven with
those of war and political denunciation to create a spectrum of
thoughts and cultural insights. And with many of the songs performed
solo, the audience was given a taste of the choir’s versatility –
individually and collectively.

A frenzy of drumbeats

While the first
half produced a reflective atmosphere for past disappointments and
difficulties, the second was more upbeat. A frenzy of drumbeats,
dramatic dances and applause accompanied songs like ‘Ou Pa Nan Chaj’ –
as playful jeers where thrown the way of the diminutive male singer who
played a man ridiculed because of his inability to successfully woo any
female.

The show got more
animated when audience members were invited onstage to dance with the
undulating women to the excited hoots from the audience. The invitees,
who seemed to be familiar with the Haitian melodies, did not disappoint.

As if the Creole
and French speaking singers had not pleased the crowd enough, they
inspired even more appreciative applause when they broke into a
rendition of Nat King Cole’s ‘Unforgettable’.

The performance was
marked with an amazing sound clarity further complemented by indigenous
percussion instruments such as drums, choucounes and Haitian merengues,
which formed the sinew of the tunes.

Ten middle-aged
singers with remarkable memories in folklore can certainly do a lot in
communicating the brotherhood of the black race, with sounds and dances
reminiscent of the West African cultures to which their ancestors once
belonged.

Universality

Michelle Johnson,
a member of the audience, commended the choir and spoke on the
universality of black culture and music. “This performance shows the
strength and durability of black culture. The costumes, sounds and
movements are very similar to what I see in Jamaica or any other
African performance. Black arts [are] really self-rejuvenating.” “How
simple can you get – 10 voices and a few random bits of percussion and
the packed crowd was spellbound from the first notes,” remarked
journalist, Andy Snipper. Much as that is true. The Creole Choir of
Cuba, established in 1994, is no haphazard assortment. It is made up of
descendants of Camaguey (an old Cuban colonial town), who studied music
and nurtured the folk songs passed down orally to them since the early
19th century then gradually fusing it with modern Haitian sounds.

The smiles of appreciation at the end of the closing performance, ‘A
Tribute to the Sun’, told of the transcendental quality of music. This
Cuban choir eventually had the audience leaning out of their seats to
grab handshakes as they abandoned the stage and still singing, sashayed
into the crowd in a show of warmth rarely experienced in UK shows.

Click to read more Entertainment news

Bilingual language packs for Osun schools

Bilingual language packs for Osun schools

Nigerian Evagrin
Rhymes, a teaching aid in the Yoruba and English languages in VCD and
book formats, is set to go into use in Osun State schools. Osun State
governor, Rauf Aregbesola, has approved the innovative and compact
teaching aid, for use by Public Primary and Secondary schools in the
state.

Mr. Aregbesola made
the announcement at the opening ceremony of the Osun State Education
Summit, held in the state capital, Osogbo, on February 7. He said that
the decision to approve the new educational programme is in line with
the vision of his administration to embrace innovative ideas aimed at
adopting mother tongues.

The move is one of
many intended initiatives to boost Osun’s investment in education and
to adopt a new road-map policy for the sector, modeled after the
defunct Western Region education policy of the late Obafemi Awolowo.

In a statement,
Hakeem Adenekan, Group Project Coordinator of Evagrin Konsepts,
commended Mr. Aregbesola’s decision for aligning his administration’s
vision with the global standard. This, he noted, is with the intention
to merge education with mother tongues by adopting and promising to
distribute Nigerian Evagrin Rhymes in books and audio-visual format
across all schools in Osun State.

“At Evagrin, what
we have done is to bring Nigerian languages back from the brink of
total extinction by documenting them in VCD and book format in three
key Nigerian Languages – Yoruba, Igbo and Hausa – while other languages
are in advanced stage of production,” Adenekan explained.

He added that, “in the last 51 years, this is the first time any
Nigerian group or individuals will be documenting Nigerian rhymes in
Audio-Visual form both in VCD and DVD with its replica in book format.
“In the 50s and after Nigeria’s independence, these rhymes were just
oral songs almost forgotten. With the collapse of the public school
system, they all disappeared.” He added that the Evagrin Rhymes
compendium is one of several projects undertaken by Evagrin Konsepts
aimed at achieving the following: educational intervention, language
resuscitation, sustenance of cultural heritage and fostering of
national consciousness and integration, especially in children.

Click to read more Entertainment news

Celebrating Taiwo Ajai–Lycett at 70

Celebrating Taiwo Ajai–Lycett at 70

One of Nigeria’s
pioneering actresses, Taiwo Ajai-Lycett, will be feted by fellow
artists in Lagos next weekend, at a celebration of her 70th birthday.
The event, an Arthouse Forum organised by the Committee for Relevant
Art (CORA) in collaboration with the African Movie Academy Awards
(AMAA), holds on Sunday, February 13 at Tribeca.

Tagged ‘State of
the Stage: Conversation With and Around Taiwo Ajai–Lycett’, the forum
presents an opportunity for the arts community to look back on the
achievements of the veteran actress, who turned 70 earlier this month.
There will be a cross-dialogue between generations of thespians, as the
forum also promises a conversation between Ajai-Lycett with two of her
fellow actresses, Tina Mba and Kate Henshaw-Nuttal. There will also be
an interactive session, with a Question and Answer segment between
Ajai-Lycett and the audience. The event will be moderated by playwright
Wole Oguntokun, the director of the popular Theatre @ Terra.

Born on February 3,
1941, Taiwo Ajai-Lycett relocated to England in 1960, and worked in the
British Civil Service until 1970. She trained for an acting career at
the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, the City Literary Institute
and the Dance Centre in Covent Garden – all in London. In a long
career, she has featured in many UK theatre productions, at venues
including The Royal Court Theatre and the Royal Opera House. She
performed as recently at 2007 in the play, ‘Critical Mass’ at the
Almeida Theatre in London.

Ajai-Lycett’s many
television appearances include one of the popular British sitcoms of
the 1970s, ‘For Better For Worse’. In the Hollywood film, ‘A Warm
December’, she appeared alongside the iconic African American actor,
Sidney Poitier. Her appearance with Michael Crawford (who played Frank
Spencer) in the classic British TV comedy, ‘Some Mothers Do Have ‘Em’
is a popular video on YouTube, and has introduced her to a legion of
younger Nigerian fans.

Since initially
returning to Nigeria in 1976, the actress has filled many memorable
roles in Nigerian theatre productions and on television. She performed
in J.P. Clark’s ‘Song of a Goat’, Soyinka’s ‘Death and the King’s
Horseman’ and ‘The Lion and the Jewel’; as well as ‘Wale Ogunyemi’s
‘The Divorce’. She has also worked with younger dramatists like Wole
Oguntokun, who directed her in his play, ‘The Inheritors’.

Arthouse Forum for Taiwo Ajai-Lycett holds from 2p.m. on Sunday,
February 13 at Tribeca, Adetokunbo Ademola Street, Victoria Island,
Lagos.

Click to read more Entertainment news

The First Poem

The First Poem

The sense

came before

the sound

lingering moon

after moon

in the

eternity of

wordless probings.

The universe

opened its

mouth and

an eloquent

fire was

born its

idiom primal

flame in

the graveless

cemetery of

Silence

Click to read more Entertainment news

‘I am content with Nollywood’

‘I am content with Nollywood’

In 1991, a young
Ramsey Nouah walked into the Surulere, Lagos audition venue of Ralph
Nwadike’s now rested soap ‘Fortunes’ and after reading a few lines, got
Nwadike screaming ‘This is the guy I’m looking for. This is the guy
I’ve been waiting for.” And so began his journey to stardom.

He made his debut
in the Nigerian home video industry shortly afterwards. 21 years later
and still going strong, Nouah’s performances in movies like ‘Dangerous
Twins’ and ‘The Private Storm’, continue to wow his teeming fans. ‘The
Figurine’ earned him the Best Actor in a Leading Role award at the 2010
African Movie Academy Academy Awards (AMAA).

Born to a
Lebanese-Israeli father and Nigerian mother, the actor has starred in
over a hundred movies and still has his eyes on the big picture. In a
rare interview, Ramsey Nouah opens up to NEXT on matters close to his
heart.

You have not been granting interviews and you’ve been out of the public radar lately. Any reasons?

It is for my
absolute peace of mind. The media makes life for everyone in the fame
line very unbearable. Just because you are an actor, people feel you
have to live your life like Jesus Christ with no blemish and when you
do make a mistake the people who are quick to point accusing fingers at
you have far more sins than you. I try as much as I can not to do
wrong, and when it happens and gets out there, everyone wants to
crucify me.

You know bad news
fly around like wild fire, so that was why I refused to grant
interviews for years because everything that came out at the end of the
day was all speculation. My peace of mind means spending quality time
with my kids and family and not having to bother about what next I’m
doing or where I am.

What was growing up like for you and did you want to be an actor?

No. I wanted to be
an aeronautic engineer or pilot but God has a way of changing your
destiny. I have no regrets whatsoever. My mum took very good care of
me. At age 10, I realised that I had two bikes to myself and then I
will fly my kite. Back in the days when boys were using newspapers and
‘eba’ to make kites, my kites were as big as a mini house.

Then at some point
everything went down, so I kind of like tasted both sides of the coin.
I am happy with where I am today, that God allowed me go through that
phase. It gives me room to become very good and versatile, hence I can
comfortably play a prince or a pauper.

Lately you have been quite selective about roles and taken parts that have deep characters. Is this deliberate?

I have had my fair
share of doing movies, and God knows I can’t count the number of movies
I have starred in. It has come to the stage now where you have a lot of
Nigerians becoming a lot more aware and interested in Nollywood.

Our movies are now
cutting across the middle and higher class and these are the kind of
people who are more interested in your capabilities as an actor,
producer or director. So it’s high time we started making movies that
can cut across all strata of the population.

Any plans to go into movie production?

Yes indeed, some
time soon. I will want to leave the front stage when the applause is
still high and go [behind the scenes]. I may still keep acting till I am
old and gray, but at the same time, I want to leave a good legacy
behind in Nollywood so that it doesn’t remain just an ordinary industry
without base or quality.

In the near future, I want a situation where parents will encourage their children to be a part of it.

Your performance in ‘The Figurine’ has been hailed as one of your best. Was it your most challenging role?

My most challenging
role is yet to come. I have quite a few but for now I will say one of
my most challenging roles was ‘Dangerous Twins’; and I liked ‘The
Figurine’ a lot. You need to internalise every character before you can
play it properly. I have been acting in Nollywood for over 20 years
now, so I think you have to give room as an artist to paint the
scenario you want to play out as an actor.

I tend to look at
roles which various artists around the world have played that are truly
captivating and try to internalise it. If it’s a [regular] character
like a lover boy, you internalise the love like as though you truly
feel it. This is what I do with all my characters.

At some point you were dubbed ‘Nollywood lover boy’, do you still take up such roles?

It was because I
was about the only one around; but now we have the likes of Majid
Michael, Van Vicker, John Dumelo, Nonso Diobi, and Mike Ezerounye, so
it gives room for variety.

What do you look out for in a script?

I like a situation
where I cannot predict a script. I have seen a lot of scripts which
have thrilled me such that you are caught unawares by the twist. What
we have in Nollywood is simple drama, but it is a good thing because we
talk about real life drama while Hollywood [has] almost unrealistic
stories. Drama is like real life but with all the boring elements taken
out.

Are there any roles you can’t take?

I doubt it. I like
a situation where I can play all kinds of roles. In my latest movie,
‘Perfect Church’, I was a homosexual pastor. I didn’t like the role at
first but I said, ‘Come on Ramsey, don’t be stupid!’ I did not have any
homosexual contact in the movie, but it was evident in the dialogue and
mannerism. What I did was psyche myself to see my partner as a guy.

What do you love best about being an actor?

I hate watching
myself, it’s so hard because I think I don’t get it right. Whenever I
dramatise something I feel it so deeply, as though it happened to me in
real life.

Which actors inspire you?

Al Pacino. I like
him a lot because I use two of his movies to prove versatility. In
‘Scarface’ – he was street tout who became a don but was still a street
tout at heart. Then there was a total contrast in ‘The Godfather’ where
he was a totally composed Don; and then in ‘Scent of a Woman’, he
played a blind guy.

Here in Nigeria, I
see Aunty Joke Silva as a very good actor. I never looked up to a lot
of Nigerian actors because many of them did not play the character that
sort of groomed me. Fadeyi Oloro – Ojo Arowosafe in ‘Arelu’ – was one
actor I used to like a lot.

What happened to your music career?

I only sing in my
bathroom and I am content with that. I also want to add that I am not
on Facebook. My so-called Facebook page is being run by those boys who
scam my fans. I have never been on Facebook and up till now I don’t
have a record. My wife knows that about me and anyone who is close to
me knows that.

It became an issue
last year when some magazine said some girl called them from Europe and
complained about giving me money on Facebook to do something about an
NGO and then I scammed her. The same journalist who called to confirm
went back and wrote that I claimed I was not on Facebook. Now everyone
knows that ‘claim’ in legal terms can mean denial.

I am also not on
twitter but my names are there because some people are using my name
and picture. When I come on Facebook, I will post a video there and on
YouTube to let people know my true identity and account.

Any plans to feature in any Hollywood/Nollywood movie?

I am content with
Nollywood. Truthfully, I feel we have created a niche so much Nollywood
is now on the lips of people around the world, so I don’t think I need
an American actor or support to blow.

Click to read more Entertainment news

Jos: For One Equal Music

Jos: For One Equal Music

PRELUDE

In A Blackhole

The power-seeker and his itinerant bombsters

from hell trafficking piety with exploding grenades

have opened a whole new morguescape in Jos.

The Tin-city’s motto of tranquility embers in pits.

The hegemonist in us has alighted from the wilds,

intent on hegemony, sans pity: to either rule the polity

ineptly till infinity, or, scorch the Capitol & the Tin-city.

Traders in hate in unequal exchanges with Jos

blacken Jos: a dire direland for a graceland of peace.

Clutching neither the Book nor rosaries; with no veil clad;

a volunteer, not as aerial beings twin-winged;

flesh and blood, for that black-hole, Grace descends.

The exterminations resurgent in the Tin-city depict

Grace to herself: a chloroform face before a grace –lift.

INTERLUDE (i)

Direland News-By Grace Searchwithinyourheart ©

Hi, dear buddy, you called me your Amazing Grace.

Your Grace, for the first time, is full of remorse.

I couldn’t dare buy you your gift of potatoes

because Jos city and markets were in splinters.

Hushed cruelties erupted and resounded unsifted

in variant plaintive notes and inhuman chords.

The STF* soldiers furtively armed one side.

I shudder to unseal the unheard: they also killed.

The other side rallied back to throng and waste

every “enemy meat”, scything beings with delight.

Hugging self-hugging, the impolitic People & Politics

columnist gloats over the clean out of other ethnics.

Power’s tiered design dungs one equal heaven:

our neglect & silence beatify the outcast & the goon.

INTERLUDE (ii)

Graceland Ditty-By Grace Searchwithinyourheart ©

Kindly keep your eyes unclosed while we join hands and pray.

May the uncreated music of equal beings prevail today:

one equal toil for one equal restitution

one equal vision for one equal communion

one equal franchise for one equal citizen

one equal home for one equal possession

one equal field for one equal affection

one equal skylight for one equal dawn

one equal gender-might to eject the old chauvinisms

one equal ground opened to one equal border, seamless

one equal music for one equal harmony

one equal harmony for one equal eternity.

Farewell to Direland.

Welcome to Graceland.

……………………POSTLUDE

A Genealogy

Jos bestowed the lifeline to my animist Midwest Ibo

maternal grand patriarch, gave song to his hopes.

Jos offered space for his prosperous tin-mining concern,

and, the first roof for his four wives and Mercedes car.

Jos gave birth to his Charismatic Catholic daughter,

who delivered her own Animist-Christian “Ibadan Boy”*.

Jos added Hausa language to her native tongue,

amplified her voice and vista, widened her being, her world.

Jos it was that christened her the first name: Ogomegbunam,

meaning-my magnanimity will not annihilate my being.

Jos presented the “Ibadan boy” his first mentor & pal, S.T.Killi,

a Youth Corp tutor at form two, and, graduate of geography.

Jos availed a grandson a city’s music of equal magnanimity:

Jos, I descant your equal genealogy & posterity of harmony.

*In memory of Chief Ojogwu Obichie, the Odafe of Ogwashi-Uku, my

late maternal grandfather.

*STF-Special Task Force on a peace-keeping mission to Jos and Plateau State.

Several news reports have confirmed that the STF also participated in killing the besieged locals.

*Late grandfather used to call the writer-“The Ibadan Boy”.

*Thanks to Grace Ukpong for the on-the-spot reports from Jos that yielded the poem.

Click to read more Entertainment news

Awards nomination night holds in Kenya

Awards nomination night holds in Kenya

The nomination
night of this year’s Africa Movie Academy Awards (AMAA) will hold on
Friday, February 25 at the Laico Regency Hotel, Nairobi, Kenya.

A statement from
Tony Anih, the AMAA director of administration, disclosed that the
event will take place in Nairobi because organisers want to appreciate
the East African block that participates in the awards. Countries
including Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi and Malawi usually send in
entries for the awards.

“East Africa has
made very strong showing and presence in AMAA since we started,
particularly in the last three editions. Apart from submitting films
for the awards, filmmakers and allied practitioners from these
countries have come to Nigeria to attend the awards.

“The AMAA
secretariat felt it is time to make them have a feel of the award by
taking the nomination night to them and thereby increasing the AMAA
brand visibility in that region of Africa. Nairobi is central to East
Africa and it is the economic hub of the region. It will be easy for
people in East Africa to come to Nairobi. It will be a great night,” Mr
Anih said.

Some Nollywood
artistes including Rita Dominic, Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde, Mike Ezuronye,
Chinedu Ikeduze, Kate Henshaw, Jim Iyke and Ini Edo have confirmed that
they will attend the nomination night. A concert to be held the
following day at Carnivore Gardens, Nairobi, is another unique feature
of this year’s nomination night. P-Square, J Martins and top artistes
from Kenya and South Africa will perform at the show.

Mr Anih described
the concert as an icing on the cake and added that the two events will
enhance AMAA’s visibility in East Africa.

Click to read more Entertainment news

Few good men

Few good men

‘One Small Step’, a
docu-drama by Remi Vaughan-Richards is based on real life experiences.
It is about a survey carried out by a research team on the activities
of Nigeria’s local governments in 2009.

The film highlights
the responsibilities of the local government which include: regulation
of public markets; provision and maintenance of public toilets;
maintenance and improvement of local roads and construction and
maintenance of primary schools. Administration of health centres and
provision of sewage and refuse disposal are also mentioned.

The inadequacies of
the local government are vividly portrayed in the film. The general
belief that it is the closest form of government to the people is
negated as it seems oblivious to the problems of the people. Bad
sanitary environment, unhygienic water and inadequate medical
facilities are some of the issues Nigeria’s local governments fail to
address.

The corruption in
the system is also portrayed when the Local Government chair that ought
to serve, gives bribe to Fidelis the headmaster. The chair doesn’t stop
there; he buys himself a jeep with money meant for provision of basic
social infrastructures for the public. While the people suffer from
pollution and die from diseases, the chair and his accomplices enrich
their pockets with government funds.

Grace Fidelis, one
of the characters played by Eucharia Edet, is a mother whose son
suffers from cholera as a result of water contaminated by the filth the
local government totally ignores. The fact that she waits long hours to
see the doctor when her son is dying shows the poor health care
provided by the local government. This is reinforced when the doctor
complains that there is not much he can do but advise the people to
boil their water, prescribes drugs and sends them home.

It shows that the
doctor’s hands are tied especially as the government is not ready to
make the environment healthy and hygienic. Grace is just one of the
many people disturbed by the dirt but nobody seems ready to complain to
the local government because they have been threatened and bribed not
to.

However, armed with
the fact that her son is dying and the drugs her husband brings home
will not stop the cholera outbreak, she meets with the local government
chair. Though he is not receptive, she is undeterred and takes her
complaints to the local government councillor.

It is indeed
ironical that Boniface attests to the fact that the local government
runs an open office policy yet he complains that Grace barges into his
office. “People capitalise on our open door policy to barge into our
office to make complaints on virtually everything,” he says. ‘Virtually
everything’ de–emphasises the importance of Grace’s visit. He describes
her action as someone who “joins the national team without first
joining the Under Seventeen team” thereby suggesting that she has not
followed proper procedure. He also complains that the local government
is for the community and not for an individual so he will not address
an issue just because of her.

Commendably, ‘One
Small Step’ not only depicts the inadequacies of the local government,
it also highlights some of its good deeds. Some local governments
including Ethiope West in Delta State and Magumeri in Borno State that
have provided good schools and water, are also shown in the film.

After a revolt that
takes place when Tola’s baby dies from cholera, everything is put in
order. It becomes clear that the film depicts the fact that the local
government is not corrupt in itself but has some bad eggs. Boniface is
sacked for a long list of crimes such as diverting funds meant for the
provision of portable water, refuse collection, running a ghost
workers’ scam, and conniving with the contractors meant to supply
medicine and equipment for the community clinic.

The film shows that it takes dialogue and cooperation as a team to
make changes in the community and that it begins with one small step.

Click to read more Entertainment news

Theatre as a human right

Theatre as a human right

Toyin Oshinaike is
going about rejuvenating theatre in a special way: he is taking
performances to bars. Like other players in theatre, the talented actor
is unhappy with the deafening silence on stages across the country,
hence his decision to intervene.

“We designed the
Bar Theatre Series because we wanted to go into spaces where people
regularly gather and do theatre in a way that we do not short change
theatre,” he says of the initiative.

“We chose the bar
because it is a place where people regularly gather. If we can catch
people’s attention, we can also introduce theatre to them. We can also,
so to speak, freak them with the razzmatazz of theatre. People will
begin to accept theatre from that level and if we say we are happening
at the National Theatre or at the MUSON Centre, they will not hesitate
to come because they are already acquainted with it.”

Mobile play

The series started
last December with ‘Wat’s Dis All About’, Oshinaike’s adaptation of the
South African play, ‘Woza Albert’ at the Gazebo, Voice House, AVOA,
Surulere. “It was excellent, it blew my mind. It was just what I
wanted. People agreed with some of the issues we raised during the
course of the play and it was a wholesome evening,” he says of the
maiden performance.

Following the
successful outing at Surulere and a subsequent one on December 19 at
Terra Kulture, Victoria Island, Lagos, ‘Wat’s Dis All About’ will
return to Terra Kulture today. “‘Wat’s Dis All About’ is a play in our
repertoire that we have been staging for the past one year. When we
launched the Bar Theatre Series, we thought we should take one of the
plays in our repertoire suitable for bars; it is not all plays that are
suitable for the bar, you have to find one that can make impact. We are
going to Terra Kulture with the play because it is a very mobile,
minimalist play. It’s a two character play, very energetic. It’s
another kind of theatre entirely, a very robust play.”

Bare bums

A scene in the
original play sees the two actors pulling down their trousers and
showing the audience their bums on the orders of their master. Is the
scene retained in ‘Wat’s Dis All About’?

“We retain it,”
Oshinaike replies. “We retain the energy of ‘Woza Albert’ and some of
its absurdities as well. That part is still retained and it’s like a
shock therapy. People scream but it’s just to jolt them. Audience
participation, that’s what we derive from that part. We challenge the
audience and vice versa. The world over, the thinking in theatre now is
more audience participation. We will tour different communities with
the play. Apart from Terra, we are also going to Ajegunle, communities
in Ikorodu, Ketu, Bariga and we are doing it free because we believe
that theatre is a human right. Everybody, regardless of level and
colour, deserves to see good theatre.”

Continuing on
baring his bum, Oshinaike says, “You know that is dehumanising, when
you ask someone to strip. It still happens in airports when suspects
are asked to strip. And they don’t strip the whites, they strip the
blacks; they strip those from the Third World, mostly we from Nigeria.
It’s a dehumanising act and it’s shocking. There is shock therapy in
the theatre, we use it in all forms and that’s one of them. My wife has
seen the show and frowns at the fact that 200 people are seeing the
colour of my bum.”

Acting for survival

Seeing the quality
of Oshinaike’s acting, many would assume he received formal training in
acting. “People have wondered where I studied and they are shocked to
learn I did not study within the four walls of a university, I studied
on the job. When I came in, the gateway was through crew, props making
and supporting the crew. But sometimes an actor is not there, the
director is furious and asks me to play the role. That was the
beginning of my acting,” discloses the actor who started over two
decades ago.

He trained under a
number of renowned stage professionals including Segun Bankole, Ben
Tomoloju, Isaac John, Bode Osanyin and Chuck Mike. “I got the grilling
from people who were really grounded in theatre practice, which is why
I call myself a theatre practitioner and not just an actor. I also have
a flair for producing and directing. I act for survival but I produce
and direct.”

Obi Egbuna’s ‘Wind
Versus Polygamy’; Wole Soyinka’s ‘The Lion and the Jewel’ and ‘Echoes
From the Lagoon’ by Rasheed Gbadamosi are some of the plays he has
directed.

Ireke Onibudo

Oshinaike has
played different parts in several productions but one of his standout
roles is as Ireke in Femi Osofisan’s ‘Adventures of the Sugarcane Man’,
an adaptation of DO Fagunwa’s ‘Ireke Onibudo’. The play, staged in some
Nigerian cities in 2009, was sponsored by Chams Plc. Seeing his seeming
effortless portrayal of Ireke, one will assume the role was a piece of
cake for the actor. Or is it?

“The guy I am
playing with now in ‘Wat’s Dis All About’, Similoluwa Hassan, was also
my double cast in the role and he fitted in more than I did. It was
challenging because I had to play a much younger role and I was playing
with a double cast who was obviously younger. ‘Ireke Onibudo’ was
originally meant for that young man, I don’t know what happened but it
was not typecasting. I had to play a lover and I’m not very strong
playing love roles. I find it difficult to play romantic roles but as
an actor, I just have to play.”

Uniquely Relentless

Though he features
mostly in stage productions and TV series, Oshinaike also dabbles into
films occasionally. He was in Obafemi Lasode’s ‘Sango’, Tunde Kelani’s
‘Agogo Ewo’ and Michelle Bello’s ‘Small Boy’. He also played a role in
Andy Okoroafor’s wave making ‘Relentless’. He recalls the experience of
working with the France-based producer.

“Andy was
particular about the pictures; about the reality of the pictures, not
about make up or lighting. He came to Lagos and said he didn’t want to
remove the noise of Lagos from his film and I was tripped by that. I
wanted to know how he would go about it. There were little sparks that
I saw in the process of making the film that were not the usual sparks
that we have here. ‘Relentless’ is something that I am waiting to see.
Maybe what went for Andy is that he is coming from an environment where
there is stricter training and respect for modus operandi, especially
in the film business. There are some films I do, I don’t know when they
are released. I’m not eager to see them not because they are not nice,
it’s just survival. But this one, I’m eager to see it.”

Has theatre been worth his while?

“Yes, it is. I have
a large family, I have five children. And people wonder is it this
theatre you are doing to support everybody and I say yes.”

If he has the power
to change anything concerning theatre in Nigeria, Oshinaike discloses
that it will be, “The policy of theatre, the policy of arts and
culture. The policies they made but have made redundant.”

‘Wat’s Dis All About’ is at Terra Kulture, Tiamiyu Savage, Victoria Island, Lagos, today.

Click to read more Entertainment news

Here comes the excitement

Here comes the excitement

Last week, Nigerian
Idol entered the final stage – the Top Thirteen. The thirteen finalists
came on stage to deliver songs from the disco era. Aided by funky
costumes, they gave very energetic performances. There was a lot of
sexy dance moves especially from the girls. But the very good news was
that the contestants finally owned the stage. Of course now, they are
being backed by a full-on band including back-up singers and not just a
lone keyboardist.

The excitement on
the show increased a hundred percent as the contestants thoroughly
enjoyed themselves prancing around the stage. Actress and dancer, Zoe
managed a full split that almost shook the stage as the finale to her
rendition of ‘It’s Raining Men’ by Geri Halliwell (originally sung by
The Weather Girls). Alex, who sang ‘Kung-Fu Fighting’, did the song
justice by adding some martial moves in the appropriate parts of the
song. His fellow cool cat, Ola, also tried to add some fire to his
performance but although he was fun to watch, he didn’t quite actually
get there.

The one drab
performance came from George who has increasingly shown himself a good
ballad singer; but unfortunately, it would seem that up-tempo songs are
not his thing. Though his vocals were as good as ever on the Kool and
the Gang hit song ‘Celebration’, his performance was rather stiff and
he gave a rather dorky finish; he tried to punch the floor.

Toni, another good
balladeer and song interpreter, also had problems with her disco
choreography. For some ill-conceived reason, she kept grabbing the hem
of her dress which unfortunately was a bit too close to her crotch.
There are only two ways to explain the move, either it was based on
modesty as a result of the short hemline or that was just the best way
she knew how to move to Earth Wind and Fire’s ‘September’.

Still poor performance or not, it usually all boils down to votes. Come Thursday and it was Nina and Ola that got the boot.

We are praying for livelier roof-raising episodes. And though we
know disco cannot be sung on each episode of the show, we are still
keeping our fingers crossed.

Click to read more Entertainment news