
Following the demise of Nollywood’s Amazon, Amaka Igwe, various movie
practitioners have expressed their deep sadness, pointing out that she
left a vacuum that will not be filled in a hurry. However, film
director/producer, Charles Novia has disclosed that Amaka Igwe is not
dead afterall, and that tears shed for her are futile because she lives
Read his full story below:
"Amaka
Igwe lives. The tears we shed for her are futile. She lives. The shock
we express over her passing on is carthatic. She lives. Amaka Igwe did
not die. She just built her loving ‘house of commotion’ in our hearts.
Commotion with co-relation; commotion with emotions.
"The
brilliant lady who could unarguably be credited as the progenitor of
Nollywood as we know it today still lives. Immortalised in our hearts.
If there was no ‘Checkmate’, that superb soap opera which had a
chart-topping five year run on national television, there would have
been no Nollywood. For the tested and trusted actors from ‘Checkmate’
were mostly cast in the trend-setting ‘Living in Bondage’. Amaka had
groomed a new generation of Nigerian actors through ‘Checkmate’, she
had prepared our minds for something explosive with her creation.
"There
is yet to emerge a soap opera since then which has all the thrills and
frills and popular appeal like ‘Checkmate’. Forget all these tin
imitations. Amaka’s soap was solid steel. Unbreakable. Unbeatable. And
you say she is dead? But Amaka lives!
"She created characters
which blew our minds. Anne Harthrope, Segun Kadiri, Chief Fuji,
Peaceful Peace, Alika, Akpan, Barry Hughes, Nduka, Bennie etc. She held
the nation spell-bound for five years every Thursday 8pm on the network
service and gave people gossip points for the next week before the next
episode. ‘Checkmate’ was her creation.’Checkmate’ was her success. She
brilliantly wrote all the epsodes, over 500 of them and produced
carefully.
"She was far ahead of her time. The most intriguing
thing about her concerning ‘Checkmate’ was that she knew when to pull
the plugs. She broke our hearts by resolving the plots and finishing
the soap opera on one Thursday evening in 1995. The country was shocked
and mourned. But Amaka was done with the soap. She had checkmated our
expectations to see the soap opera run forever. She just knew when to
stop. And that last episode of ‘Checkmate’? The best ending I have ever
seen in Nigeria for any serial and come to think of it anywhere in the
world. It was so brilliant. Amaka ended the plots and sub-plots and
showed us all why the serial was titled ‘Checkmate’.
"Anne
Harthrope ( played by Ego Boyo who was replaced by someone else for a
few months while she was on ‘maternity leave’) married Segun Kadiri (
played by RMD who gave the character a brilliant interpretation with a
raspy voice and finger-on-the-cheek affectation) and just as we all
sighed that at last the two enemies had fallen in love and tied the
knots, Amaka gave us a twist. Anne cleverly ‘divorced’ Segun Kadiri,
warning him that she only married him to give her baby a father but
that she would never sell or hand over her company to him!
"The
last scene ended with a stupefied Kadiri laughing in shock, knowing he
had been ‘checkmated’. So classic. And that was not all. She
brilliantly had the cast talk to the viewers before the end credits in
scripted lines about how the soap opera made its run. That episode was
so good and popular that NTA Network had a re-run of it the next week.
"On
the set of ‘Violated’ in 1996 ( her post-’Checkmate’ opus in which I
was cast as Jide, the banker) she told me how agonising it was to write
that final episode. ‘I was pregnant then and I would write and discard.
I can’t count how many scripts of that final episode I wrote and tore.
The denouement just was not clicking. Then, finally I got the muse. And
I just kept scribbling on my bed. When I finished I was so happy and
screamed out to Charles (her husband) ‘Honey, I got it!’ and we both
screamed and hugged ourselves!’ That piece of information stuck on my
mind.
"But Amaka is not dead. With enduring works such as
‘Violated’ (which re-defined and triggered the romantic drama genre in
Nollywood) ‘Rattlesnake’, ‘To live again’, ‘Forever’ and ‘Fuji House of
Commotion’ , how could she be dead? This lady who has been the subject
of various dissertations and academic theses changed our creative
landscape.
"Her contributions to the creative industry cannot be
quantified. She was an advocate for professionalism. She was a stickler
for excellence. A cerebral contributor to Nollywood’s trudge of
progress. She wanted what was best for the industry. She was behind the
founding of the Movie Practitioners Council of Nigeria bill (MOPICON)
which has been gathering dust at the National Assembly for years. That
bill is supposed to be to Nollywood what NBA is to the Lawyers and NMA
to the Doctors. Amaka wanted this bill passed. Could our fractured
Nollywood please unite to ensure that this is done if only to honour
and immortalise her?
"Thank God she got a National Honour from
President Jonathan a couple of years back. An MFR. A well-deserved
national honour for an Amazon of Nollywood. She believed in young
talents and had an open door policy for any talent who came to her
office. She had an academy too, where young and ambitious filmmakers
were trained.
"What about her film and television bi-ennial
festival in Abuja; Best of the Best (BOB) TV? Or her radio station, Top
FM? Or her painstaking contributions to the committee set up to give
guidelines for the 3 billion naira grant given to Nollywood by the
President? She fought tirelessly for the industry to maximally benefit
from the grant.
"And with all these achievements, you say Amaka
Igwe is dead? No, she lives. Her footprints on the sands of achievement
on the beaches of our creative economy are there for all to see. Too
large to fill."
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