She is beautiful and well-endowed. With
well-toned skin and robust body, actress Jennifer Eliogu is one of the early
starters of Nollywood. The Anambra State born actress started about 16 years
ago when she made the bold step to pitch her tent with the make-believe
industry. Today, the talented actress has earned herself a household name in
the industry. Jennifer, who set out to become a singer, found herself stuck
with acting, and is gradually setting another pace as a compeer. And for
nudity, that is gradually becoming the fad in the industry, Jennifer will not
touch it with a 10-meter pole, insisting that she would rather show-off her
endowments. “Flaunting is an entirely different thing from nudity. Flaunting I
will forever do; nudity, forget it (laughs) - never!” In this interview with
Segun Ajiboye, she spoke on her career, life and plans for the future.
Excerpts:
For some time now, you have been on the move traveling from
one place to the other. What have you been up to?
It's been good so far. I've been up to a whole
lot really; but, as you know, I am not the type that sings about it until I am
sure that I am ready. But what I can tell you is that whatever it is that I am
up to is good news.
Besides acting, I know you do compeer jobs. Was it a part of
you from the start or is it something you picked up?
I think it simple came up somewhere
along the line. It wasn't a part of the plan, just like acting wasn't my
original plan. I set out to be a singer, but for some reason, I found myself
acting, and thank God, 14 years later, it has been good. In another month or
two, it will be fifteen years. I was not serious or committed when I started
doing MC work, it was more like a joke. It began at a friend's wedding. The
programme was not going according to plan and it was chaos everywhere. I just
picked up the Mic and started talking. Everybody was so impressed with the way
I handled the whole thing. At another wedding, the live band wasn't doing too
well, so I called the guy, gave him some tips and we started singing some
popular songs just like that. It wasn't pre-planned, but it went well. It is
still working well for me.
So what is happening to your singing skills?
(Laughs) I sing for fun.
Professionally, I haven't really done anything, but I am still singing and will
always do. I love to sing. I do not just karaoke, I also do live performances.
All these I do for fun. The truth is everything that I have set out to do
concerning entertainment, I have done. As far as I am concerned, I am living my
dreams. It is not a competition. I am not going to sing because every other
person is singing. I'm going to sing to live my dream. I produced a movie not
because others are doing so, but because I saw the need to positively
contribute to the growth of the industry. At a time I realized that it wasn't
enough to just criticize what others were doing, I tasked myself to make an
input. And so, I wrote my story back in 2006. I had just had my daughter in
Switzerland; I wasn't working, so it afforded me the time to really write. I
did not write in a hurry, I wrote at leisure.
What is the story all about?
It's a family story. I think it's about
time we brought back those stories that don't just entertain but also educate.
I tried in my little way to bring a little bit of education for the young girl-child.
It stars Kenneth Okonkwo playing the male lead, and myself. We also have Aunt
Ebele Okaro, Thelma Okoduwa, Dorothy Njemanze and a whole lot of others. In
fact, I featured a friend of mine, Abibat Lasisi, who was acting for the first
time and she did really well. It's a beautiful story that you and your entire
family with your children can watch together. You don't have to tell your child
to close her eyes. The rate of nudity in our movie these days is appalling. So,
this movie is something that I am proud of. One of the basic reasons for writing
the story is that it is my own way of trying to sanitize the industry of
nudity. We all go crazy sometimes; we all flaunt it. I do, I am sure you know
(laughs). But for the movie, there is sanity. This is something that will last
forever. In Nigeria, a child could walk into a video club and request for any
kind of movie, and there is no restrictions on age. I think it's high time we
brought back some of those moralistic films back on the shelves.
What could have prompted you to say that you have no rival in
the industry?
A couple of times, reporters would ask
who I see as a rival in the industry, who I see as my biggest challenge.
Truthfully, I neither see anyone as a challenge, nor do I see anyone as a
rival. I am me. If it is my job, then it will come to me; and if it is not, it
will go to whomever it is destined for. Like I said, it is not a competition. I
appreciate a whole lot of my colleagues, but I know where to draw the line. For
me, I don't see anybody as a rival. I am not particular about playing lead
roles. Whatever character you give to me, I give it back to you to the best of
my ability. I don't try to be like anyone else. I am just me. There is really
no basis for competition.
Have you had a situation where your fans mistook you for one
of your characters?
(Laughs) Well yes, a couple of times. Recently,
I received an award in North Carolina, US. One day we went out shopping and one
African American lady walked up to me and she was like, “O my God, that was
good the way you stood up to those in-laws of yours. They wanted to take
everything away, but you didn't let them.” Imagine, an American lady! I almost
didn't believe it. Apparently, she had seen one of my films called Plane Crash.
In it, I had a little row with my in-laws. But while she was talking, I told
her that it was just a movie, and she said, “Yes I know, I'm just so glad to
see you in person.” At another time, I was at the market and someone just hit
me from behind and said, “Why you wan kill Genevieve, wetin she do you?” I laughed
while I told her that it was just a movie. So it happens. Some people tend not
to be able to differentiate between the actress as herself and the character
she plays in the movie. The same way some people just assume that you are the
character you play in the movie. If you play the role of a witch or a
prostitute, then you must be it to them. I don't know how else to make them
understand that it's just make-believe.
You once played the role of a widow in a movie, and you
rejected the same situation happening to you in real life. Don't you think it's
high time you did away with characters that don't agree with your spirit?
In most cases, I don't have problems
with such scripts, though I am very particular about the scripts I choose. I
have been passionate about every film I have made in the last fourteen years.
As for that character of a widow, sometimes people don't know that we just
don't act because we want to entertain. Most of the movies are true-life
stories and their aim is to educate people on traditions and norms that should
have been abolished a long time ago. So I was happy to play that role. And for
every role I play, I pray about, no matter how positive it is. If it is a
positive one I claim what it offers, and if it is a negative one, I reject what
it portends, big time (laughs). It doesn't bother me. Once a producer gave me a
script; it was a movie about the marine world. I was going to play the role of
one of the alien spirits. I wasn't comfortable with it because I had shot
something like that before. That was my second movie in the industry. It was entitled
Bora. After that time, I started having nightmares about the water world-
snakes, pythons, sea dragons and all that. I didn't like it; I had to go for
deliverance. So now, I am very careful. But if I find a script that is good
enough, I will take it as a challenge and pray about it because I know that
whatever I stand against, my father in heaven stands against it. But if the
character is not relevant in the story, I turn it down.
A story has it that when there was heated crisis, it
increased your asthmatic condition. How true is that?
I reject it in Jesus name! Asthma? I
have never read that. Let me ask you something; do people at any point not stop
to think that we are human beings like them? I mean, we are normal people, we
breathe air like them, and we defecate and do other things like human beings.
We have families who get upset when certain things are written about us. They
write things that make you want to regret going into the industry. Why would
you wish somebody asthma, when she doesn't have it? For the records, I don't
have asthma. I have never had it and I never will. I know that in most cases
people who have it might not be sure that they have it, but I don't. I send it
back to the sender.
Did the strictness of your parents shape you into what you
are today?
Yes, it has shaped me in the sense that
with my popularity, and with lots of friends, you hardly find me hanging around
with friends as many they are. Most of my friends call me 'mother superior,'
and that is not because I am better. I might appear crazy on the outside but I
am not a total introvert and I am also not an extrovert completely; I swing in
between. But in my heart, I am more intro than extro. My parents’ training made
me conscious of the kind of association I keep. Every time I pray, I ask God
that every friend that won't add value to my life, every negative friend,
should be separated from, both spiritually and physically. I am not a perfect
person, but if you don't live my kind of life, we can't be friends. There's got
to be something that we have in common. If you are more righteous than I am, if
you’re crazier than I am, whatever it is, I must learn from you; there's got to
be something that will be of value to me.
So what was growing up like?
Growing up was fun. Everything we
needed we had. We had all the space, and all the toys to play with; it helped
us grow up as a bunch of broom. My siblings and I are very close because we
were each other's playmates. We were not used to going out to play. I have a
very wonderful family. So whatever we do, we did amongst one another. Even now
at our ages, we can't do anything without one another. That is why I said that
I have a very wonderful family, and I thank God for that. We keep our quarrel
amongst us. We fight and settle it amongst us. There has never been a time when
we call somebody to come and settle a rift between us. As a young girl growing
up, you get curious, you want to know what it is your father is trying to protect
you from out there. Then, eventually, you find young teenage girls getting
pregnant, young boys joining gangs, and all what not. This happens when you are
overly protective of your child. So there is both an advantage and a
disadvantage to it; depending on how you look at it.
How far can you go as regards nudity in movies?
Flaunting is an entirely different
thing from nudity. Flaunting I will forever do; nudity, forget it (laughs) -
never! With flaunting, you are free to tease with those areas that you know you
are endowed. If you have fine legs, once in a while, you want to show off. If
you've got a good face, you can't hide it even without make-up. Same also if
you have a good skin, you don't need anyone to tell you that. I can't be
wearing long sleeve wears all the time when I know that I have got a good skin.
A little bit of cleavage every now and then is allowed (laughs).
Don't you think all this attracts men to you despite your
status?
Even when you wear dresses that cover
you from head to toe, men will still come. They have eyes like eagle. When they
see a good woman, they know from miles away, even when she wears a Hijab. There
are certain things you can't hide. Men would always be men and see them. And if
you are a woman and you don't have admirers, you don't have men make passes at
you, then there is something wrong with you. For people to look at you and
thank God is part of what makes you a woman. But then, it's left for you to
draw the line. I don't have a problem with men admiring me, but I try not to
put myself in a position where I will be molested or harassed.
But have you had issues with your in-laws complaining about
your style of dressing?
No, I don't because I am hardly
immodestly dressed in real life. I don't harass people with my dressing, unless
you begin to have ideas in your own head. I don't dress provocatively. I don't
walk the street wearing dresses with very low cleavages. I wear it to occasions
like awards, beauty pageants; I mean common places. It's showbiz. But it's not
like I wake up every morning walking the street half nude. They know me and my
dress sense, and they know that he (my husband) doesn't complain about it. I
will never wear anything that will embarrass them. I will never wear anything
that will make them ask some questions. Some families complain even when you
dress modestly, so just be yourself. I know that I am a good person. I know
that I have a good heart. I am a very free-spirited person.
What will you consider your greatest fear?
My greatest fear is growing too fat;
fat to the extent that I cannot fit into my clothes. I have a tendency to blow
up if I don't control it. My mum is like a size 18/20. I used to be afraid of a
whole lot of things, but the more spiritually strengthened I became, I
understood that your greatest failure is fear. You cannot be afraid of
something you have no control over. Just do the best you can and allow destiny
play out naturally. I try not to make fear a part of my vocabulary.
Very beautiful and exotic lady.
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