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Jenifer Eliogu is one
actress who has made a mark for herself. She relocated abroad a few
years back to be with her husband, a union which produced a boy and
girl. Back as a movie producer and singer, the actress, in this
interview she talks about her NGO, reasons for
going into music, her decision to return home, among other issues.
LET’S talk about your new movie. It is
called Within and it was shot in 2011. It was premiered in Lagos
Oriental Hotel, Sheraton Abuja and Grand Hotel Asaba. We also took it to
the US where we entered for a competition called Movie Awards; we were
nominated but we didn’t win. We then entered for another one in the UK
JEFTA Awards, and got the Best Child Actor award 2011.
Last year, it was released in the US and
we kept doing promotions. We went to South Africa and eventually back
to Nigeria where it was released on DVD on the 21st of this month. Also
at the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library Abeokuta, we have
agreement to show the movie for two weekend; ;that is last weekend and
this one, so we obliged them. So far it is going well and I am glad that
the movie has been released.
So far, how has the response been?
The response since the release has been
amazing and I am happy about it. I hope it continues like that. I wrote
and produced the story myself when I had nothing doing. Then I was
nursing a baby. It has turned out to be a blessing.
What was the motive behind the script?
I feel we should create a balance in the
stories we write, not only movies that adult could watch, but one that
families can sit down to watch and enjoy together and children would
learn from; to create a balance between the very good and bad. We will
be going on set very soon for another one.
Now that you are so busy with production, how do you manage family and work?
There is so much to be done, taking care
of the children, taking care of my family as a whole and then my movie
and music. I just released a single into the market and so far it has
been amazing. It is coverage of an old song of Celestial Okonkwo redone
by me with a bit of R&B and highlife.
It is not just me, but the passion for
what I want to do and taking care of my family. I create time to write
my scripts. Being that I do not go to location all the time, I have time
to write other stories and songs. I create time to go to the studio
too. But everything I put my mind to do, I do it to the best, to the
glory of God.
Tell us about your music
It is a 12-track album and will be
released before the end of the year. We are coming out with a single in a
week or two while trying to shoot the videos. I have come to do music
professionally now. We want to promote two or three singles and shoot
videos first.
When did you discover you have a passion for music?
I have always said that music was my
first love but acting found me first so I gave it my best. Now I am back
to my baby which is music.
How do you intend to meet up with the competition on the music scene?
To me music is not competition but
ambition. I am living my dream and doing what I want to do. And my kind
of song, I don’t exactly do hip-hop. I write and sing songs that go with
my personality. I do inspirational, love songs, high life and jazz. I
might add a little bit of hip-hop maybe at one time, but that is if it
works. I am more of a soul singer.
So you get to love my songs for what
they are. I do not want to sing what is commercial. I know we need to
make money but guess there are still people out there doing so well. I
intend to make a whole lot of money from it. My music is not for now, it
is a generational thing. I want people to listen to my music ten years
from now and remember me for good music. Listen to Sonia Spence and
Onyeka Owenu, how many years over? We still play their songs.
I write strong lyrics, and in my songs I
like to do a bit of entertainment with exposure to societal illness.
The same thing I am doing with my songs is what I am doing with my
movies. Reggae is almost extinct in Nigeria, but guess what, I can tell
you that with that singular song, reggae will come alive again. I am not
exactly a reggae artiste, but I love reggae and it is for all ages.
Did you take permission before redoing the deceased’s song?
Yes. The people who run his estate,
Premier Records, and then COSON cover the record label; so I wrote to
both parties. I am a law-abiding citizen. I spoke to the president of
Premier Records too and I gave them a letter too. Unlike people who just
pick up people’s works and feel that because it is an old song or
probably because the person is dead, ‘I can do the song.’ It is someone
else’s intellectual property.
We have actors who have tried their hands on music but didn’t succeed. Do you think yours will be different?
As I said earlier, I have come to do
music professionally. I am not leaving music for acting, I am doing
entertainment in totality which I believe I have a gift for. The bible
says your gift will make way for you, so I am going to stick with my
kind of songs, be myself and do what I know how to do best. I am not
going to try to be someone else and then lose focus.
I know a lot of actors in Nollywood have
tried music but everybody has the right to experiment. If you think you
have passion for music; give it a try, because it is worse when you are
scared of what people will say. I know I have what it takes; I have the
voice. I know I might not have that voice of Whitney Houston, but I am
comfortable with my kind of songs.
What were you doing at the time you took a break?
At that time, I made two beautiful children; a daughter and a son.
Currently, are you fully into production only?
I am doing both acting and producing. I
produce every movie I act in it too. If I do not fit in, I won’t force
it. I will let other people handle it. Presently I have a job I am
co-writing with someone. I have done a couple of songs in the past one
year.
When you are not working, what do you do?
Because I am restless, I get bored
easily when I am not working or when I am on location. Asides helping
the children with their assignments, having family time and all that, in
my spare time, I write scripts. When I am not, I try to pick up a bit
of things that I put up for sale. I just like to be positively
productive.
Why did you relocate at the time you did?
I got married and my husband happens to live abroad and like I said, have kids too.
Why did you decide to return home?
There is no place like home. I can say
life is easier there because they have a system that works. Their
amenities work but the truth is, you work and put the money back. Back
home in Nigeria, it is easy to fit in because I already had a career
before I left.
It was easy coming back to what I know
how to do; having to spend a longer time going back to school and trying
to get a job. I had to take the former over the latter. I have my
papers and I can travel whenever I want to. It is not easy breaking into
the movie industry abroad. But because home is home, somehow you will
get that break.
Why was it hard for you to make the break over there?
Nigeria is Nigeria, abroad is abroad. If
it was that easy a whole lot of Nigerians will be working abroad. For
rehearsals, the money they pay you is much more than the money you earn
here for a lead role. It is not easy anywhere to break into the movie
industry. So rather than just sit there and keep trying and trying, you
just get frustrated. Even if I do any other job, it will not be one I
have passion for. I might be making money but there is a part of me that
is not happy. But I will stick to my job, which is entertainment.
How did your husband take it when you informed him about relocating again?
That is a discussion that we had had
over time. We looked at the option and what was going on. It was not as
if I could not get a job, sometimes you cut some slack if it will make
the other person happy. Even when I was there, I kept writing. I just
had a baby and I was not working. The three scripts I have were written
at that time. I am glad that happened because after a while, we just
felt that we could do it and since we have access to going and coming
back. It is working out.
Are you here now with your husband and kids?
The kids are here with me, but he is over there. He has a job there, so during holidays we can travel.
How are the kids coping with the change?
Before we relocated, we had been home
like twice and I have a huge family as well. Once in a while everybody
comes around to visit and I f I want to travel abroad for business, my
mum comes to stay with my children. If they are on holiday, I take them
to my parents while I do what I have to do.
How was coming back to the movie world after the break?
As at the time I came back finally,
because I remember that in between the time I shot like three movies, it
was a different ball game. We had a whole lot of young actresses, which
made it interesting because at some point, you have to give room to the
younger ones to showcase their talents.
What beat me was that we had a whole lot
of half-baked stories being tendered. Everyone was going into movie
production and every young girl wanted to be a star at whatever cost. At
one point we were losing direction, movies were being recycled.
What is different now?
Because there is fund and somebody is
willing to bankroll, we shoot movies that promote negativity much more
than positivity. For me I felt I would do a couple of good works. I did a
work for Emem Isong, it was a beautiful story and I shot another one in
Benin on Igbinedion’s biography.
So I said to myself, since it is like
this, why don’t I do something on my own since I already wrote a couple
of scripts? Why don’t I give it a try and see how it goes? Really, it
was a good decision that I took. Not only was I able to show a story
that will promote family, child education and finding love, I was able
to be an employer of labour myself. I employed not less than 10 hands
who have not tried their hands on acting or crew work before and we all
worked like a family. They are all willing to go on location again.
Somehow it is as a way of giving back to the society. Apart from the
fact that I have an NGO called IFDEAS.
When did you start the initiative?
It started in 2008, but was officially
launched in 2010. We lend helping hands by giving money and food to the
physically challenged on the street. We give to 500 people on the
streets at the beginning and end of the year. We also go to the women’s
prison, pray with them and give them toiletries. We also go to the
motherless baby homes and then we organise seminars and development
programmes for youths. We have done that twice and we are planning
another one this year. Slowly but surely you are giving back to the
society whichever way you can.
How do you get your funds to keep the NGO moving?
I do not have any sponsors, so when I am
working, I put aside some money if I have that project in mind. For
instance, if I get a N500, 000 job, I know N50, 000 goes to that. We
have another youth development programme, I don’t call it empowerment,
because they expect you to share money. But if you give money to a
person with the wrong mind set, he will spend that money on frivolities.
We need to educate ourselves on the need to be useful to ourselves,
because we keep expecting the government to do everything. And if you
are useful to yourself no body can influence you because you know what
you want.
How have you been able to maintain your figure after child bearing?
I have to be very honest with you; I
have been battling with my weight. There is nothing I do to it. It is
just that when I see that it is getting out of hand, I cut down on my
carbohydrate, and I begin to walk, and do a bit of exercise. I stop
eating after seven pm.
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