Emeka Ike
Beyond revisiting old wounds in the Actors Guild of Nigeria, controversial actor, Emeka Ike, reflects on his life, writes CHUX OHAI
Nollywood actor and factional
president of the Actors’ Guild of Nigeria, Emeka Ike, was a special
guest of V Channel, a new pay television in Lagos, last Friday.
The actor had arrived in the studio of
the TV station in the Ogba area in company with fellow actor and host of
the Gulder Ultimate Search reality show, Chidi Mokeme, and the
president of the Arewa Consultative Forum, Yerima Shettima.
Occasionally, Ike squirmed with
discomfort, especially when he was asked questions that appeared to
probe a little too deep into his private life. But the occasion afforded
him the opportunity to address some issues concerning his constituency,
the Nigerian movie industry.
When asked to relate his experience as a
factional president of the AGN, Ike let loose a canon. “I really don’t
care about the AGN because it cannot put food on my table or pay my
bills,” he said.
Yet, for the benefit of those who felt he had ‘gate-crashed’ into the body, he tried to set the records straight.
“I was actually invited into the fold
by members of the then Board of Trustees of the AGN to solve the
problems of the body. At the time, they told me that the problem was
Ejike Asiegbu. They said he had been in charge for too long and had
refused to leave. There was even a case pending in court.
“So, since I believe in the rule of law,
I decided to get involved. At the end of the day, I discovered that the
same people in the board of trustees, who had invited me to take over,
were the problem of the AGN. They were not more than five people. But
the way they ran the board, it meant that they determined what happened
in the movie industry.
“I had to take the bull by the horns. I
decided that those five people must leave the AGN or nobody else would
have a place in the industry,” he said.
Eager to shake off the ‘bad boy’ image
that had stuck to him ever since his career kicked off, he went on to
correct certain notions that most movie fans have about him.
“Some people think that I am a trouble
maker. They think I am a bad boy in the movie industry. But that is not
who I am. I hate injustice and I fight for the oppressed whenever I can.
I will give you an illustration.
“One day, I was passing by Oshodi Bridge
when I saw a physically challenged person struggling with a policeman. I
had to pull over immediately and confront the policeman, though he was
armed. I succeeded in stopping the fight. This is the kind of things I
do.
“I believe in hard work. I don’t date rich women for money. I believe that you can become a millionaire by selling akara. My mother sold akara to train me and I am a millionaire today,” he said.
The actor, who wants to be remembered
for his humanitarian deeds, would like to see Nollywood witness a
radical shift in terms of the language of production. He wants films to
be produced in indigenous languages and actors to be proud of their
cultural heritage.
“We should be making more films in Igbo,
Yoruba, Itsekiri, Efik and other Nigerian languages. I don’t like it
when we speak English all the time and try to imitate the American
accent,” he said.
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