The Re-Invention of Uche Jombo!
By mamazita!If there is anyone that deserves an award for the Artiste-that-has-most-reinvented herself’ it has got to be Uche Jombo! Uche has systematically worked her way up the hard, arduous road of fame and stardom, improving on her craft and losing a whole lot of weight in the process. This multi-faceted actress is also a writer and has recently delved into producing films. She is a Glo Ambassador and recently returned from Zimbabwe where she was a guest of the Zimbabwean Government. www.nollywooduncut.com (NWU) tracked down this hard working star (where else?) on location and this was how it all went! Enjoy!
NWU: Hi there Uche!
UJ: Hi Bola! How’re you doing?
NWU: Very well thank you..let me first of all congratulate you on your weight loss!
(General laughter)
UJ: Thank you!
NWU: And youre looking va-va-voom! Care to spill the beans on why and how that happened?
UJ: Well, I always knew I was a bit on the big side especially around the hips and when we would shoot I would look even bigger on screen so I took the decision to lose weight. That apart, I also lost weight to be in character for a role in a movie where I play a cancer patient.
NWU: Oh really? We’ll come to that later…. Word has gone out that you have been going behind the camera executive producing and co-producing movies..would you clear the air on that?
UJ: Yes, I have executive-produced two movies to date..one is ‘Nollywood Hustler’ which we shot last year and is due for release very soon. The other is the one we are shooting right now, ‘Holding Hope’ but Im doing that in collaboration with my colleagues, Emem Isong and Desmond Elliot.
NWU: That’s the one where you play a cancer patient right?
UJ: Yes.
NWU: What’s the difference between producing and executive producing?
UJ: Executive producing merely means you are the one bankrolling the film and producing is when you actually get things done like hire the director, cast, crew and generally make sure the production is going on.
NWU: There seems to be a new trend with actors and actresses these days executive producing films… first there was Stephanie Okereke with her film ‘Through the Glass’ Desmond Elliot co-producing ‘Reloaded’, ‘Before the Light’ and ‘Guilty Pleasures’ and even this film you’re shooting and Ini Edo producing her yet-unreleased film ‘Memories of my heart’. What is going on?
(General laughter)
UJ: Well, I can’t speak for my colleagues but I can say that it’s more about me evolving and wanting to empower myself. Apart from being an actress, I also write scripts and when I would write and sell to some producers, may be due to financial constraints or plain not understanding the story they would end up spoiling it…at least my vision for it so I decided that the next time I have a story close to my heart, I would bank-roll and produce it.
NWU: And what has the experience been like?
UJ: Hectic as you can see!
NWU: Tell us about this film you’re currently shooting… ‘Holding Hope’.
UJ: It’s a beautiful story…a story about love, one’s faith, life and about cancer.
NWU: Why cancer?
UJ: Hmm… I was recently on a flight from Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) to Harare (Zimbabwe) and I met a cancer survivor. We got talking and she told me her story about surviving breast cancer. Of all the things she said, what stood out for me was how she was able to live and face life with just one breast. She said she knew her husband loved her but she was apprehensive because he was a man that like physical beauty too but they were able to cope with that.
NWU: So did you shoot the movie about her life?
UJ: No..but it was part of the inspiration for the film. I say this is a lucky script because all the elements that were favourable to it, came together. Coincidentally, when I got back to Lagos and was chatting with my friend (Producer) Emem Isong she said she had just read a sad story about a lady with cancer and wanted to combine it with a script she had had for ages on domestic violence. So I came over to her place and she, her sister Uduak Isong Oguamanam and I plotted the story for this film which we titled ‘Holding Hope’. When we finished we knew we had a winner. Infact Emem said if people don’t scream, laugh and cry during this film that it is pointless. You definately leave with something having touched you.
NWU: So it’s a tear-jerker?
UJ: Absolutely!
For the
rest of the interview go to www.nollywooduncut.com
SUNDAY INTERVIEW WITH STAR ACTRESS AND GLO AMBASSADOR UCHE JOMBO
By Jane bondAll men are dogs
She insisted she was the girl next door. The okada riders in Mazamaza, Lagos, didn’t think so. They saw through her designer sunglasses and collected N250 for leading her to The Sun Corporate Office, a service that ordinarily cost only N50. Their rationale for charging her 500% more than everybody else was because she is now a star. They are right, aren’t they? But the journey has been long for this once troublesome girl who preferred football to dolls. Uche Jombo let us into her world: the intimate details of her hero, her father, Nelson Jombo, the man who shaped her world view of men and marriage and why we should stop blaming men for not being able to keep their zips up. In tears, she told the story of the father she loved to bits but who ‘refused’ to live beyond 57 years.
Mike Awoyinfa, Dimgba Igwe, Funke Egbemode and Sam Olatunji were there.
Sunday, June 14, 2009
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Uche Jumbo
Photo: Sun News Publishing |
I was such a difficult child that my mother told me I must have
at least one child to do to me what I did to her.
I was born in Enugu. Later, my dad moved back to Aba. My
childhood is a huge part of where I am today. I was not an easy
child. My mother used to say I must have a child like me and I
would say no, what if I don’t want to have a children and she
would tell me I must have one and go through what I made her go
through. I did everything a teenager would do and more. I climbed
trees, played football and played cowboy. I’m short-sighted and
that is as a result of a clothes hanger entering my eyes. I was
the only female playing football with boys.
At that point, my mum had given up because she felt I thought I
was a boy. It was then that a friend told her to put me in a
drama group in church. They called the group Children of the
Lord. We ministered every Sunday but I was not happy because I
thought my mother wanted to curtail my excesses. Later, when I
heard they gave scholarship every quarter, I started competing to
win. That was the only time I had acting experience. I have
played every woman in the Bible (laughter). It was a very good
starting point for me. When I told Fidelis Duker I still remember
some of the lines I played in the church, he told me to read the
last one I played. I read the lines of Ruth and he was impressed
that I could still remember my lines of over six years.
My father said Abriba girls don’t act.
At a point, my dad said, ‘you are an Abiriba girl, you cannot act
or disgrace the family name.’ Ten years ago when I was starting
out as an actor, if you say you wanted to act, it is like you had
given up on life. That is why it gives me joy when mothers stop
me to say I should help their children that want to act. And now
my uncles refer to me as their niece in interviews. It is a
lovely feeling. I never thought that would happen.
An Abiriba girl is expected to go to school, marry and make
babies but I broke the myth
An Abiriba girl just goes to school, prepares herself, gets
married and stay there. Sometimes, an Abiriba man will tell you
to sit at home and be a full-time housewife. He feels it is an
affront if you go out and work. I sit back and hear lots of
stories come out of my culture. Where I’m coming from, I’m larger
than life because you have so many things in front of you telling
you you cannot break out of this chain or life. But I have been
able to break out.
Some say it is even unheard of for an Abiriba girl to marry from
outside Abiriba.
But my mother is not Abiriba. Even my elder sister, who is the
first child of a first son, did not marry an Abiriba man. That is
to tell you how strong my mum is. I think she was able to give us
the opportunity to be whatever we want to be irrespective of the
culture.
So far, I have not dated an Abiriba man. I’m not saying I have
not dated an Ogbo man but an Abiriba man, no and I cannot say who
I have dated in the papers. Maybe somebody dey there dey count
for me (general laughter).
Today, I’m an Abiriba girl who stood for what she believed in and
is living her dream
I’m just the girl next door. What I mean by that is those close
to me know me as Uche Obi and not the popular Uche Jombo that
people know. I think at a point you have to surround yourself
with people who know you and can tell you the truth.
The Jombo name is both a blessing and a curse. Jombo is my real
name. In Abriba, the Jombo is a popular family name. It is not a
nickname. Every Jombo in Abriba is related to me.
Every Abiriba person is believed to be strong in business and I
am no exception.
I think I work harder because of where I come from. In the
beginning, my father would not hear jack from me as per acting.
He went on and on to tell me I’m an Abiriba girl because at a
point Abiriba girls were seen but not heard. So, I’m proud to be
an Abiriba girl who stood for what she believed in and is living
her dream.
Fidelis Duker gave me my first on-screen opportunity.
It happened by accident. I had taken a letter to Fidelis Duker as
one of the marketers of REEL Awards. When I got there, there were
so many people; I think I was number 50 or so. When I got inside,
he did not even look at me, he just pushed the script in front of
me and said read. I said, ‘I’m not here to read; I’m here to give
you this.’ He looked up from his table and said, ‘what’s that
supposed to mean?’ He said, ‘you are not an actress and you can’t
act.’ I said, no, ‘I’m not an actress but I can act.’ He asked
how I knew I could act. I told him three years of my secondary
school was sponsored by a scholarship from an Acting School. He
asked if I had acted in front of a camera and I said no. He told
me to read for him and I did. I walked away with the Linda role.
Fidelis Duker was the first person to give me the on-screen
opportunity. That was in Images. I don’t think he has paid me for
that job (laughter). Actually, he was the first person that made
me believe I could do this aside my sister.
Being an Igbo girl does not guarantee success in
Nollywood
After Images, I started working with people that were on the same
set. I did My Visa To Hell and Adure, which was my first lead.
People always thought it was my first film. It wasn’t; it was
just that it came out before My Visa To Hell.
Being an Igbo girl does not give you an edge in this business. I
don’t think so. If anybody should know I think I should because I
don’t think I saw success like this five years ago. I don’t think
there is any tribal sentiment. People that say that are just too
lazy to go out there to look for job or package themselves for
the job.
The famed sex-for-role does not exist
Anybody coming into the industry must first believe in himself.
It starts with believing in yourself. Trust me, the
disappointment will come but your belief in yourself will keep
you going. As for the sex-for-role thing, it doesn’t exist. If it
does I would have been a star long before now.
My father, my hero and why I think men are
dogs
My father is dead but he was my first hero. He is the reason I
think there is love and I also think men are dogs. The truth of
the matter is, it is not their fault. It is the way they are
built. It is not possible for a man to be faithful no matter how
much he loves a woman. Remove religion out of it; it is not just
possible. My dad is an Abiriba man, He was the first son and he
was married to someone from Mbaise. You can imagine that. I
watched my parents’ drama unfold in front of me. I sometimes
blackmailed him at a point when I caught him with a woman
(laughter) but I never squealed to my mum. Why should I tell when
I was busy collecting money from the man? (laughter) . I cannot
tell you how many times I caught him with girlfriends because I’m
only running my mouth now that he is dead.
My mum was strict. She was always cancelling stuff from the list
we brought from school. It was what she approved that my dad
would buy. I would wait and just go and meet my dad in his
office. I would tell him I wanted to collect money for the stuff
my mother cancelled from the list and he would give me. I have
not seen any man who loves a woman the way he loved my mum but if
he could do that, it means love does not guarantee faithfulness.
There was pressure on him to marry an Abriba woman when they were
giving him a chieftaincy title but he refused. That still did not
stop him from having girlfriends.
Every woman deserves a man who loves her more than she
loves him
It is not the men’s fault; it is just the way they were made.
Trust me, my dad is everything I want in a husband if I
eventually see one. I want a man who could root for me; who could
trust me when everybody is against me. I think every woman
deserves a man who loves her more than she loves him. Because of
the animalistic thing in man, they have tendencies to take a
walk. But a woman, especially an African woman, cannot take a
walk because when you are divorced whether you like it or not you
are a tokunbo. Even the men that come to you feel you should be
happy they are coming.
I wish my father had lived long enough to see where I am
today
He had family values. As far as I’m concerned, I don’t know a
better Abiriba man than my dad. He always spoke his language to
you whether you understood it or not. He was proud of his
heritage. My only regret is that he is not here. I would have
loved to tell him I told you so, see where I am. He didn’t
believe I was strong enough for this.
I’m a combination of both my parents. I want to believe I took
after their strength but I don’t know whom I took the stubborn
thing from.
Here’s the point she broke down and cried. We switched off our
recorders in memory of Chief Nelson Jombo.
My dad died at 57 but he smoked actively for 35
years
My father’s death is something I don’t want to talk about
(sobbing). My dad is the reason I can never smoke or marry
somebody who smokes. I don’t want to talk about my dad (crying).
My dad didn’t die by accident. He died of bronchitis. That is
what you get when you smoke for too long. He lungs were
infected.
In this industry, most people feel they have to smoke to be
hip.
I was shocked when someone called me to say they wrote that I
smoke. I had a good laugh. I could do any other thing but smoking
is something I will never do because it killed my dad. Those
close to me that smoke don’t feel comfortable doing it around me.
Smoking is not something people can give up for you. My dad was
still smoking while undergoing treatment because it was an
addiction. My dad died at 57 but he smoked actively for 35 years.
The man smoked a major part of his life. I always argued with him
not to smoke. If you presented your reasons against smoking, he
would tell you he had been smoking before you were born.
I cannot accommodate a cheating husband
I can’t. My dad is the reason I see that that is the way men are
created. But that does not mean I will accommodate it. I take
pride in being an African woman. I can’t take the fact that
someone should tell me there is nothing I can do about a cheating
husband because I’m an African woman. I don’t think that should
be the case. To whom much is given much is expected. I demand as
much as I give. When I give you so much in a relationship, it is
only logical that I demand as much.
I don’t know if I can accept a man who is unfaithful. I don’t
think I can accept a man who doesn’t have family values or who
thinks I should be happy that he is in my life. He should be the
one that is happy I’m in his life. Anybody who is going to end up
with me is the winner. There is nothing saying I must get married
as an African woman. I have not seen the right man. Someone can
be a perfect boyfriend and not be a perfect husband.
If you can get 70% on the list of what you want in a man, then
you have gotten your perfect man.
In a relationship, there are things you can take in a marriage
and there are things you wouldn’t. The transition from being
single is drastic. Most men still prefer women to sit at home and
not work and I wonder why. Yet they are still attracted to women
who are working. That goes a long way to tell you about men.
There is no perfect man. All those people who say they are
waiting for a perfect man are deceiving themselves. If there is a
perfect man, there won’t be God. If you can get 70% on the list
of what you want in a man, then you have gotten your perfect man.
The media and Nollywood marriages
It is the same press that say Nollywood marriages don’t last that
always ask when we will get married. The fact that somebody is on
the screen does not mean the person is not human. The only
difference is that everything you do is under scrutiny. It annoys
me sometimes when people look at you as different from other
human beings. I guess it is just one of the curses of this job.
It is just that the blessings are more.
People who don’t know jack about you talk about you. The junk
journalists supply them with stories that are not true except the
correct spelling of your name. Sometimes they get mine wrong.
They spell Jombo with a ‘u’. So, you have to defend yourself to
people who really know you and you wonder what you have to do
with people who don’t know you.
The media can only speculate about my relationships. They can
never hear it from me. I know that if you want your relationship
to grow, you have to keep it out of the press.
Life is one big stage and we are all
actors
What you become in life is not about what you read in school; it
is all about talent. I think all of us are actors. It is just
that some of us have decided to make money with our talents. If
you check out life, who you are in the presence of our kids is
different from who you are in the presence of visitors. We all
act at different levels of our lives. It is just that we don’t
realise it.
I have no regrets dumping statistics. Luckily, my dad is not
alive to hear that. I don’t have regrets at all. Two of my
classmates are in my employment now. One is actually my primary
school classmate while the other was my classmate in secondary
school. It is just about them knowing who I am from when I was
born.
So, it is about what you do with what you have acquired. I don’t
think any knowledge gained is wasted.
My first script, Ordained, was produced eight years
ago
I started writing when I started acting. It was just that people
did not know. My first script that was produced, Ordained, was
about eight years ago. It is just that I’m mostly known as an
actress. But I will not tell you how much I earn.
I am a success story
I am as successful as I can get. I think my career speaks for
itself. Success is being fulfilled at what you do and in all
modesty, I am a success story. As for failure, I think you cannot
know success if you had not known failure. I have known failure
in every area of my life. For me to get here, I must have known
failure. For you to say you are successful, you must have known
failure.
There had been times I felt like quitting. when my career wasn’t
going the way I wanted. People were telling me to go and get
(another) job. There was a point I felt I was tired but I never
stopped believing in myself.
I cut my dreadlocks to repackage myself for new
roles
It’s showbiz. At a time I was always getting a particular role
and I needed to prove that I can act other roles. So, I cut my
hair because I had dreadlocks and I totally repackaged myself.
And you won’t believe it, I started playing other roles. The
truth is, if producers see you in a particular role, you have to
do something drastic to convince them that you can play other
roles. You have to be able to look at your jobs and learn. That
is why I find it funny when people say they don’t watch their own
films. You must not get to a stage where you stop learning. I
never stop learning. Every day is a learning process. I watch my
films to learn more.
Kissing on screen
I don’t think kiss on screen is real kiss. I have not really
played kissing on the screen.
I’m a sucker for good dialogue
I’m a sucker for good dialogue. When I see good dialogue I sink
into it. Being an actor is a privilege because you are able to
live another life and come out of it and still be you. I had to
first of all fall in love with the script.
The characters I play do not affect me. Rather they teach me.
When you play the role of a drug addict, you know the evil of
drugs. I learn from the character I have played.
My rating of actresses
Mercy Johnson is drama queen, Ini Edo is charismatic, Omotola is
lucky. It is not easy to be having kids and still remain on the
A-list. Ramsey is a cross-breed. Emeka Ike, that is my bros now.
Bimbo Akintola, she is just Bimbo. And yes, there is rivalry in
the industry. It might not be on the surface but it is there.
Ini Edo and I
She is my friend and still my friend.
That is the press trying to find something out of nothing. They
said all kinds of things about why I was not at her wedding but
the truth is i didn’t because I was working. I wasn’t released
and she understands. Ini is my friend and she is still my friend.
As far as friendship is concerned, you hear things about each
other. I saw it in the paper and we spoke about it.
Journalists make up all kinds of stories about how there is so
much in-fighting in the industry. They need to make some people
scapegoats. For instance that one actor ended up playing a role
originally cast for another person is nothing new or unusual. I
don’t think there is any actor alive who has not played
somebody’s role.
