Friday, 12 February 2016

DEDE MABIAKU AND BIMBO AKINTOLA SENT ME BACK TO SCHOOL - YVONNE JEGEDE


Yvonne Jegede, one of  Nollywood’s beautiful acts who is presently making a wonderful 'comeback' after going away to school for a few years, was in our office a couple of weeks back and we had this wonderful ‘time out’ chatting. Here is an extract from the very interesting chat we had with some of the exciting pictures we took as well. Enjoy! 

Yvonne let’s assume that someone out there is listening to you for the first time. So let's hear you  who is Yvonne Jegede?

Ok Yvonne Jegede is an actress. I emmh... just turned a producer and I have been in Nollywood for over a decade. I intend to do better jobs so that I don’t have to introduce myself anymore *smiles*.

I know you from way back. So where have you been since 'African  Queen' because I started seeing you in some movies then after a while you just disappeared.

I’ve been away in school in Cyprus, an American University in Cyprus and ehmm I left in 2007, that was about four years after I started working as an actor and then I came back in 2012. I took one year break off school to go and ehmm... party, have fun and do whatever it is that young people do *laughs*.

Since you got back what have you been up to?

I have been back since 2012, I have been working actually and if you have your eyes on the internet, Irokotv, I’m not supposed to do advert for them *smiles* but they pay me *she laughs again*... Irokotv has a couple of my movies on there and ehmm you can check them out and you have some DVDs .. so I have been back and forth in Nollywood. A couple of the movies where you can find Yvonne Jegede include Haunted souls, Oge sister, the good wife and threes’ company, which is the movie I Just produced is already online and you can go and watch. There are a lot of other movies where I starred and ehmm... I think if you just youtube my name Yvonne Jegede, you will find all of them.

The first time I saw you was on the ‘African Queen’ video by Tu Face Idibia. And I was like ‘who is this beautiful dimple faced lady? So I looked forward to see you again which I did in just a few movies  and then you disappeared. I’m sure not many people feel like it’s compulsory to go back to school after all they are  in the industry already and making good money and all of that. So why did you go back to school?

 
I ehmm... first of all I want to say ‘thank you’ to Dede Mabiaku and Bimbo Akintola. Those two people worked my brain up…hmm because I dropped out of school earlier…in LASU because I was studying Law and ehmmm….Uncle Dede kept saying “you think say you fine? By the time you old all your beauty go don wash comot” (laughs)  typical of him and he kept going on and on and on. He was even ready to assist  me as per getting me a school and I didn’t understand why he was really bent on me going back to school. Same with Bimbo Akintola…she…I… you know she’s well read and she kept hammering and hammering. And I would say I’m lucky being their friend because I have been able to pick one thing…take one thing home which in the next 60, 70 years… I will always remember them for making me think about going back to school which honestly…people say “oh you shouldn’t have left, if like say you stay, you for don big now…people for don know you…blah blah blah” and I say  (sighs) "oh please!

I’m happy I went to school because acting anywhere in the world will always wait for you as long as you can still read scripts and move around… you will still be an actor. But for school… you ‘ll get to a certain stage and really your brain would not be able to assimilate anymore… as per school-wise, to study those things you really don’t need…(laughs) because at the end of the day you go into an exam it’s not those things you read you usually find there or you work in a bank it’s not x plus Y you usually find there. So I’m glad I went back to school. It was not an easy task. I..I was already making money like I said before. Having to leave ‘making-money’ to go back and spend the money… it wasn’t easy but with the help of God, my dad and a couple of friends, I was able to pull through. I’m glad. I will not take those  five…four years…specifically four years back, I wouldn’t.

On a count of one to ten, how would you rate Nollywood today?

I would say Nollywood is on a seven. People may wonder ‘huh’ that is a lot but I don’t think that is a lot. Ehmm… the five years I took away and … comparing what nollywood is now to what it was then, I will say we’ve taken a very huge gigantic step because we have loads of people who have gone to learn  the craft and art of movie making. Initially it was just the love for it. A lot of people who just love to produce…a lot of marketers and people are recording in Asaba, Alaba  whatever they call it and then they started this business, but thank God we have a lot of younger people who have gone to learn it professionally in an institution of four walls and have come back to you know… bring in better ideas, bring in better projects, better cameras and equipment and have a better people who have actually studied acting not just …oh … behind the camera. People who are before the camera have gone to study acting. So I’ll take it that it’s a very big step. It is slow, people are not seeing the change, but it is happening inasmuch as piracy is kind of pulling us back but…we’ll fire them very soon *laughs*.

Talking about this issue of piracy, do you think it’s ever going to end?

It will…you cannot stop it, that’s for sure but you can curb it, and if you can curb it… because …I was saying, if you put ehmm… those retailers or the ones that sell on the roadside in a spot where they have to hide… then it’s being curbed.

Would you give some credit to newly opened academies as one of the factors for the improvement in Nollywood lately?

Of course, you can’t put that one out. You can’t put it out because I and someone were actually having a conversation and I said “it’s a shame that Nigerians, we literally rule Africa when it comes to entertainment, music, movies. Nigerian movies are watched everywhere and now Americans actually rule the world because of this same entertainment. They have better movies, they have better songs, they have… when it comes to media, social media, they have…they are very good at it to showcase what they have. Now we have that power over Africa as a whole and the government hasn’t really done anything. There is no institution anywhere, where people can actually come to Africa, come to Nigeria to study film-making, it’s really sad. I was in East Africa three years ago to shoot a film and then the camera man was asking me “do you know Clarence Peters” and I’m like if people here know these people, someone else said “I know Sam Dei Dei” that’s Sam Dede. And these are people…you can actually build an institution where you have people like Sam Dede teach first…teach acting, teach film. Have people like Clarence Peters, DJ Tee… all these people who know camera to come and teach people cinematography. You have the likes of Tunde Kelani to come and lecture in school. Tade Ogidan to come and lecture in school; people like that but we don’t have NOTHING. Shame on Nigeria. I’m sorry!

In all of these, where do you see Nollywood in the next ten years?

In the next ten years I see Nollywood not just being one of the top three movie making countries in the world but one of the best top three movie making countries in the world. So it’s not just saying “oh they produce one thousand films in a year” but they produce … even if they still produce a thousand films, but very good movies. I see Nollywood…it might really…it might be slow. It might take ten years but we will get to that.

What are your thoughts on the present acts in the industry in Nigeria?

The industry has actually given a platform for people to come in, which is very good…or I would say impressive. Initially, it was a monopoly. If it’s Genevieve, then it’s Genevieve. If it’s Mercy Johnson, then it’s Mercy Johnson. But right now everybody is out there. It’s no longer “oh I know one actress who can do this” there are tons of them out there now. Like I said, a lot of people have gone to schools to learn the art and craft, so I’ll say…it’s a good thing…come on y’all.  Like I keep saying, If you can act, if you have the talent, join the Nollywood, let’s push Nollywood further. Nollywood deserves to be better than where it is right now. So if you are young and have creative minds…it’s not just being an actor, you can be a young Director, sound person, gaffer just come on, let’s all tag along and push this industry further. Entertainment is for everybody and the sky is big enough for everybody.
   
Let’s talk about ladies bitching or beefing one another in the Industry. Do you think it will ever stop?

Nooo! It will not stop!! Being bitter is an individual problem *laughs* and if you are still that person, you honestly will still be hating the next person. Simple!!!

Why do the guys make up so easily on their differences but the ladies keep at each other for long?

Hmm…for guys, don’t be deceived. I am in the industry and I know guys don’t like themselves as well. But they have a better way of handling it by acting as if the beef it’s not there.

One of your great moments.

One of my great moments was when I when to the UK and ehmm… in Peckam  this Cameroonian woman walked up to me and said “oh my God! You are the Nigerian actor, I like you, I want to take a picture with you, can I”?  and I said “Oh of course you can, why not” and she goes “oops! My phone just died. Can we go over to that shop and charge my phone so I can take the picture”?  And I had my shopping bags of rice, garri and all of that with me. As I was thinking in my head oh my God how did this woman catch me at this time?  She offered to help with some of the bags and we went, charged the phone and took the pictures. It was tiring but at the end of the day, I felt really good. And it was somebody who wasn’t even Nigerian. It also happened in South Africa as well. A South African walked up to me in a shop in Johannesburg and said “I see you in Nigerian films” *laughs* and I replied in a south African tone while laughing “yes it is me you see on your screen” Those are some of my great moments.

Any last words on this interview?

Just take care of yourself. Drink water and exercise. You don’t have to go out if you don’t really have to. Stay home and  relax.




 


 

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