Neglect, sickness and poverty are
three common themes that echo through the riveting tales of their lives.
This unholy trinity, which
dominates the lot of this class of Nigerian actors, evokes the tripartite
emotion of sympathy, hopelessness and, ultimately, anger.
Indeed, for many a Nigerian
actor, what you see is not always what you get. On the screen, they are draped
in colourful designers’ apparels. They have access to posh cars.
They occupy palatial buildings.
In reality, they live a contrasting lifestyle, some of them barely surviving
above the poverty line. This is a common narrative in the lives of many
Nollywood veterans.
In the last few years, the
plights of many veterans have become abysmally precarious. Many of them died in
penury. Others are now living under grave conditions. The growing prevalence of
their gloomy denominator is giving observers of the entertainment industry
concerns.
“It is really unfortunate that
Nigerian actors have been left to die. I don’t know why calamity has chosen to
befall the film industry,” lamented Chika Okpala popularly known as Zebrudaya.
Entertainment Express highlights
10 entertainment veterans whose plights fall under this bleak purview.
Ngozi Nwosu
She is fondly known as Peaceful
Peace after her popular role as Madam Peace in Fuji House of Commotion, a
sitcom created by the versatile Amaka Igwe of the Checkmate fame. But these
days, peace is a relative term and a strange word for the ailing veteran
Nollywood actress. Ngozi Nwosu now looks a shadow of her old buoyant self after
being hit by a strange ailment.
Last week, the Imo State-born actress moved to
a London hospital where she went for advance treatment for what was described a
heart and kidney ailment that has been ravaging her for months. The trip was
made possible by kind-hearted Nigerians who responded to a frantic appeal for
N6.5m funds with the Lagos State Government donating a lion share of N4.5m and
another N1m coming from MTN-sponsored Who Wants to be a Millionaire game show.
Baba Sala
These days, death hoaxes about Pa
Moses Olaiya (famously known as Baba Sala) is becoming one too many. What is
not clear is who wants the Ilesha, Osun State-born multi-talented thespian
dead.
There are those who believe that the 74-year-old actor who suffered
stroke some few years back is on the brink of a total breakdown as his
condition continues to grow worse. EE learnt that this veteran actor of Yoruba
classics such as Orun Mooru, Mosebolatan and Agba Man is now a shadow of his
old self.
Last year, the veteran actor and holder of MON national honour was
celebrated at a special ceremony organized by National Association of Nigerian
Theatre Arts Practitioners (NANTAP) in Lagos.
Olaiya who oversees a very large
family hit a rough patch about two decades ago when his film, Orun Mooru which
he shot with a bank loan was pirated. “It affected me seriously because we
borrowed money to do the film,” he recollected. “The practice then was to
borrow money from banks to do our films. The films were often done abroad,
unlike today where they use video. The money we used to borrow then was so huge
that it required heavy collateral. That was why my career almost took a dip,”
he reflected.
James Uche
“Today, we hear that artistes die
here and there. It’s not because they want to, but because they can’t afford to
stay alive. If my leg is finally amputated, it will be because of lack of
money. Maybe, I should just say it is my luck that this is happening. Maybe I
stepped on something but all I know is that I never offended anybody. I always
like being on my own.” This was how Prince James Uche captured his predicament
three years ago.
Not that there have been much changes since then as the
talented actor continues with his battle with ill-health. Last year, news
spread far and wide that the father of three was kicked out of his matrimonial
home by his wife who was frustrated with his unending troubles.The 48-year-old
actor who rose to fame in the 2001 blockbuster, Odigbo is still languishing in
pains and crying for help.
David Offor (Clarus)
Among the new generation, the
name David Offor or Clarus might not strike a familiar chord. For lovers of
that famous TV classic, The New Masquerade, Clarus is not just well-known, he
was one of the popular characters that kept millions of viewers glued to their
TV with his antics and banters.
Today, life for Clarus is not the same again
after he was hit several years ago by a strange blindness. At the moment, the Enugu
State-based actor is on the list of Nollywood’s ‘endangered species.’
Offor who
lamented recently about how he has been living in abject poverty and neglect,
implored well-meaning Nigerians to come to his aid lest he goes the same way of
some of the cast of the rested soap such as Gringory who passed on last year
after langushing in penury and a protracted battle with stroke.
Ola Omonitan (Baba No
Regret)
Among Yoruba movie enthusiasts,
Ola Omonitan popularly called Ajimajasan or Baba No Regret is no stranger. What
many don’t know, however, is why he has been out of circulation for such a long
spell.
At 74, there may not be much left for Baba No Regret to prove after
putting so many years into the Yoruba theatre. He is a veteran of several films
and TV dramas including Omo Araye Le, Bata Wahala and Ogunlaye, which ran on
NTA Network from 1981 to 1983.
Ajimajasan would have been history if he had not
gotten a timely treatment for an ailment diagnosed as prostrate cancer. The
Ilesha, Osun State-born actor, who started acting in 1962, found a Good
Samaritan in Aare Musulumi of Yorubaland, Alhaji Arisekola Alao, who paid the
bill of his three-month treatment in South Africa last year.
Narrating his
experience recently, Ajimajasan revealed that the situation drained him
financially. “I wish I had developed my other skill as a furniture maker before
I ventured into acting. That is why I advice younger artistes to have a Plan
B,” he regretted.
Romanus Uchenna Amuta (Natty)
The cliché, “life is an irony”
aptly captures the pathetic condition of veteran actor, Romanus Uchenna Amuta
famously known as Natty for his role in the classic TV series, Village
Headmaster.
In a movie industry where stereotyping is a common trend, Amuta is
many producers’ favourite for the role of a ‘Poor Man’ which is evident in his
numerous movie credits both on TV and in movies. In real life, Amuta barely
lived above his stereotype character.
His case was worsened when he suffered a
debilitating stroke in 2006. “Even the best clothes in my wardrobe were bought
in 1984 when I made some reasonable money…” he recently recounted.
A tearful
Amuta confessed unashamedly: “I’m so so so so poor that I could not even get a
decent treatment for the stroke ailment that befell me when in its early days.
Now that it is even worse, there is no money to even enjoy myself.” He added
dryly, “Even if na small enjoyment before I quench like my mama wey die a long
time ago.”
According to a source, Amuta who is now confined to his dingy
three-bedroom flat on 7, Umuchi Nwoko Street, near the popular Agbani Road,
Enugu State, now cuts the picture of a 90-year-old owing to his partial
paralysis.
“I have reached out to my friends but it appears they have abandoned
me to die. As for my relatives, they have tried but they can’t kill themselves.
My children have also done their best for me,” lamented the Enugu State-born
thespian.
Majek Fashek
After several rescue attempts by
his friends and a few other admirers, Majek Fashek, veteran reggae sensation
has defied all efforts to bring him back to his best. The Rainmaker as Majek is
popularly known wandered on the streets of New York for several years but he
returned to the country two years ago to re-establish his music career.
Several
years ago, a group of his bosom friends made up of former members of the rested
reggae band known Ja’stix rallied several personalities including Edo State
Governor, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole to rehabilitate the reggae icon. But that
effort was thwarted when he slipped out of the country without notice according
to one of the arrowheads of that mission, Pastor Amos McRoy.
The latest effort
by a burgeoning record label, A-Plus Global suffered a setback when the Little
Patience crooner suddenly went missing.
Days later, another disturbing news emanated
that the self-styled Prisoner of Conscience was chained at his Gowon Estate,
Egbeda home over deteriorating mental health identified as schizophrenia. “We
have given up on Majek, his situation is complex and defies solution,”
regretted a source.
Emma Edokpayi
Ask veteran thespian, Elder Emma
Edokpayi, life is no longer about milestones but moments. One of such
life-changing moments albeit a sad one, occurred in 2004 when he suffered a
devastating stroke.
For the veteran actor of many flicks and producer of the
classic soap, Hotel De Jordan, it was as if life had come to an end. It was
obvious that things will never be the same again following the partial
paralysis which the father of four suffered as a result of the ailment.
Unsurprisingly, movie roles dried up for him as producers and directors ignore
him for more physically fit actors.
Edokpayi was at a vulnerable moment in his
life. However, not everyone abandoned the Edo State-born. Four years later,
luck smiled on the actor when amiable life Patron of Movie Reporters Guild of
Nigerian (MORGON), Andrien Gbinigie made a commitment to him of a yearly
financial endowment of N400,000.
Since his ordeal, Edokpayi’s routine has been
restricted to his Akute, Ogun State home where he still struggles to survive.
Abdul-Salam Sanyaolu
(Charles
Olumo “Agbako”)
But for a lot of grit and some
luck, 85-year-old Alhaji Abdul-Salam Sanyaolu formerly known as Charles Olumo
was a few miles away from suicide at the height of his ordeal with a stroke.
What’s more, life for the veteran Yoruba actor took a turn for the worse as
poverty was added to his hydra-headed predicament.
Sanyaolu whose screen name
was Agbako lamented: “I suffered stroke, my only bus got burnt and every member
of my family deserted me. To survive, I sold my only house just for N300, 000
which I used to foot my medical bill,” he lamented.
Luckily for the star of
several Yoruba classics, his sad ordeal caught the attention of the benevolent
leader of Synagogue Church of All Nation (SCOAN) in 2010. “A friend of mine
took me to the Synagogue Church of All Nation (SCOAN) where I was given N500,
000. God I thank you because I thought I would die in my abject poverty.”Agbako
remembered. These days, Agbako who can be found in his home in Ejigbo, a Lagos
suburb is far from being well.
Victor Eze (Alika)
“Everybody has been avoiding me.
Not even the president and members of my association, the Screen Writers Guild
of Nigeria (SWGN) where I was the secretary or the Association of Movie
Producers (AMP) where I was actively involved gave me any attention,” lamented
gifted comedian, Victor Eze who is currently nursing a stroke.
That was in
2011. At the moment, not much has changed for the talented actor who brought
smiles to the face of many Nigerians with his popular comic role as Alika in
the sitcom, Fuji House of Commotion. Things are definitely not the same for Eze
who has been hibernating at his Ikorodu, Lagos home.
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