Nollywood actress, Stephanie Okereke Linus Idahosa (MFR)
speaks with TADE MAKINDE in this interview about her marriage and career.
Excerpts:
How has life
been as a wife?
Beautiful. Life
has been beautiful, good and fun
Fun how?
Fun because you are happy with someone you really love
and looking forward to share the rest of your life with. It makes it
interesting because it’s a long journey.
You took
your time before you eventually got married. There must have been some
pressures while single from many. How did you handle it?
In the Nigerian context, there can be pressures maybe
when you get to a certain age or stage; you know what is knocking on your door.
I was talking to someone recently and she was like no one is coming, but it is
not a race. When you understand marriage is not a race and that when your time
comes, it is your time. Some people can marry early and live 10 years of misery
and pain and then you just get married in one year and you are having so much
bliss in your life and that person that had married for a long time is even
wishing that she could just have this moment with this man that I am staying
with. One of the biggest traps that the enemy has is to pressurise you and put
you in a corner so you can make a wrong decision, especially in marriage. That
is the biggest thing and when you make that wrong decision, then you are in for
it. It is so good that you take your time and ask God for the actual direction.
You know He gives you the endurance, patience and everything to stay in that
marriage.
In your case
did you experience that kind of pressure?
Not really. I
could have been married a long time if I wanted, but I had a vision for what I
want for my life. Even for man. It is good for man to mentally decide that he
wants to get married. It is also good for us, women, to be mentally committed
when we are ready for it. I am going into this not because of the way the
society has formed it to be, that one is ripe for marriage within the age of
23-27, but it is good for one to mentally decide that she wants to be in a
marriage so that it won’t be a burden when you enter into it. You are entering
with your eyes wide open and whatever comes out of it you must have made up
your mind and be prepared that this is what you want.
When you met
your husband, how did you know he was Mr. Right?
(Laugh…) I think
it started when I came back. My head was all over the place and I wasn’t in the
mood for any kind of relationship. It eventually got to a point that I told God
I was ready. It was like a journey for me at one time and I did not want to be
in that space. I told God that I wanted to be in a serious relationship now. It
was like a conversation between God and I. He said okay, are you ready, and I
replied Him in the affirmative. It’s funny. It wasn’t like I was looking for a
husband but I was ready to be in a serious relationship and have a courtship.
That was why I said you have to be in a mental state because it is not good for
you to end up dating the wrong person. I met him. Initially we didn’t have the
mindset to date. It started with a business arrangement. He said he had an idea that could help my
career. Of course he got my attention and we started seeing. I think it was the
third, fourth meeting we started adjusting. He asked me out on my birthday and we dated
for a year
When did you
make up your mind to accept him?
It was in the course of the journey that I started
realising he was all I wanted in a man and I knew in my spirit. You just know
these things and it just happened. He must have known earlier that I dug him,
but he was just waiting for a special moment to make it happen where I will
always remember. Maybe that was why he decided to tell me on my birthday.
Do you think women
should get worked up on the issue of marriage?
It is not at all costs. People have different reasons for
getting married, but at the long run you need to really check what the major
reason of getting married is.
Why did you
take your wedding abroad?
Imagine my wedding taking place in Nigeria? It would be a
carnival and I didn’t want a carnival for my wedding. He didn’t want that too.
We are very alike and we wanted something really special. It was not that we
couldn’t do it here, but we had travelled wide a lot during the course of our relationship
and we really wanted something special for ourselves and our families. We
weren’t thinking about the people, it was about us trying to make that moment
special. It wasn’t what we decided, we also asked God. It was not like we chose
where to get married. It was something spiritual for us to do and God also
confirmed to us that we should go there and get married.
How did you
receive the confirmation?
During the wedding arrangement in Nigeria, we were
thinking on where to do it, either in Nigeria or elsewhere. So we were thinking
of Paris, but we wanted to be sure and we needed a confirmation on where to go.
It was like you wanted something and you also needed a confirmation because it
is going to take a lot. All the people that went came back safely. My husband
and I met with the chairman of an airline. He donated a plane to move all our
guests. What better confirmation do you need than that?
Your wedding
took place abroad. Are you guys also planning to raise your kids in Nigeria or
abroad?
The world is becoming global; it’s going to be both
Nigeria and abroad.
Have you
guys decided on the numbers of kids to have?
Am I supposed to tell you that?
Just
asking...
Okay. As many as
possible.
When will
you start because I expect you to have been pregnant by now?
Are you God that is going to decide on that? This kind of
thing, you don’t decide it yourself.
Since you
got married, you have not featured in movies?
I have appeared in lots of them. It depends on how many
you have watched yourself. I am working on the ones I produced myself. Its entitled ‘Dry’. It has to do with the challenges women go
through during child birth. That will be my first project since I’ve been
married. The first phase was shot in Nigeria while I am taking the second phase
abroad.
Why abroad?
It was because of how the story was written.
The selected locations in Nigeria...
Ogoja in Cross River State and Abakaliki. Also in Abuja
and a little in Sokoto.
How long
have you been working on it?
Since I was in the university. I started it when I was in my second year.
That would
be when?
About 12,15 years
ago. It’s been a burden to me that I needed to do this project. Every time I
tried to turn away from it, I found myself coming back to it, so I needed to
get it over with.
The federal
government’s support for the entertainment industry started with a N200 million
largesse, but there had been lots of complaints on it. Suddenly, another N3
billion has come. Do you think it’s okay to be doling out money like that or to
address infrastructural problems?
The money is good. I commend this government because it
is the first to show interest in the Nigerian entertainment industry. It is
actually the first government to give money to the industry. It is good because
we need it, but what we need most is not even infrastructure, it is the
policies that will help the structures stand.
The issue of copyright and other policies surrounding
piracy and distributions are there to be addressed. If we get this, the
industry will drive itself because we have been driving ourselves with this
massive piracy. We need to put data in place. You know it’s like an open market
and there is no control. It has got to the stage where your works are being
pirated to your face and there is nothing you can do about it. There are no
laws there to protect our works. Those who want to invest are not coming
because they are not sure of getting returns on their stake. Though the
copyright commission has been making some arrests, it should be on a larger
scale. We should set out laws that will put an end to all these.
Before
acting, what career did you pursue?
Taqwando and high jump, but I stopped because the bar
always hit my legs. I did that when I was in school.
The tenure
of Ibinabo Fiberesima will end sometime. Would you consider leading your own
generation?
(Laughs…) She is doing a good job. She can rerun.
You don’t
like to lead people?
I do lead people
every day. It’s not like I can’t lead people in the open or public, that I am
not scared of, but it depends. Even as it may, leading AGM is not on my radar
for now. I have different things and projects that I am working on right now.
Don’t forget we are supporting Ibinabo to come out with good things.
How do you
manage to look cute?
At a point after my marriage, I discovered that I had
added weight, but I had to shake it up. I engaged in some exercises, watched
what I ate and also cut down on so many things. I also cook. I like cooking.
Do you
consider having a food outlet?
I don’t know about that.
I just love cooking because I love to try new things and my cooking is
fun. It is like inventing things. You come out with your recipe and people’s
recipe and adjust to the things that work for you.
What project
are you working on?
We are trying to bring maternal issues to fore. We had
have cases of lots of women in Nigeria that died during child birth. It is even
higher than people who die of HIV or on our roads every day. Unlike women when
pregnant, it is a 50/50 chance. Being someone who has been advocating that our
health care system needs to be better because when you fall sick in Nigeria, it
is always between you and God. I have been there when I broke my leg and it was
just the mercy of God because there are certain things that happened that can
just make you go crazy in the hospital. It is to encourage people. There are
certain things I am passionate about though, it’s just that I am taking it one
step at a time.
What’s the
budget for the movie?
Don’t worry about that. I am not giving you the budget
for now until when I finish the job. It has a lot of cost. My next plan is to
complete the shooting abroad and I am working towards its premiere at the end
of this year and I am going to do the premiere almost everywhere. I am working
on a new strategy for everything, including the distribution.
Are you not
scared that this work might be pirated?
Everybody is pretty having a nightmare, but that has not
stopped us from bringing out contents; that is why we are pressurising that
certain policies are being declared before the end of the year to help protect
our works and that is what we are advocating for those policies to happen. But
the producers have been working out plans. The government needs to come in with
these policies and with enough machinery and enforcement to make these things
to happen.
What was
your growing up like?
My parents were a little bit flexible. It was not that
they were not comfortable with my being an actress. Because I have always been
bigger than my age, my father always said I was growing like a tolo tolo
(Turkey). He said I should ensure my brain grew with me. To them, you just had
to know the reason you wanted to do anything. Like me, coming into this
industry, I keep asking myself and asking God every day the purpose I am in
this industry because life is all about growth. Over time, people will say you
have impacted, but it has to be more than that. You have to also find a way of
reaching to the people and affect their lives.
We are eight in number. I am the sixth and the third girl. I am not the
only one in the showbiz. I don’t know what happened to my elder brother, he was
supposed to be a big time producer in Nollywood, but it seems he is more
interested in show promotions and other things. Also, my younger sister, who is
an up-and-coming gospel singer, also has another sister who is also into
presenting and online stuff. We are all virtually more or less into showbiz.
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