| I'm
no sex symbol.....Jim Iyke
Q: How did you become an
actor?
A: I can’t find any particular reason I
can readily point at.
Q: Was it joblessness?
A: Well, that could be considered an
option, but not necessarily. I had what
you might consider a good job. I was
serving in Union Bank. I was another kid
that didn’t know his left from his
right. Sometimes you stumble on things.
And I think that was what basically
acting
did for me. I stumbled on it. I was
trained in another field and I was ready
to start a career in that field and then
somebody talked to me about this. It was
supposed to be an interim measure;
something I would do for some time. But
it turned out to be a niche and that’s
exactly how I found myself doing what
I’m doing. There was no proper training,
no preparatory training.
Q: Some people see the
Nigerian
movie
industry
as a success. Is the
success artistic, commercial or both?
A: I’ll put it this way: In terms of
disseminating a certain culture through
the window that we adopt which Nollywood
is now known for, I think by and large,
it’s become a success. Economically, I
could not agree. But to preach a certain
message to blacks in the Diaspora, we’ve
come to be accepted as something that
has come to stay. Creatively, yes. We
have some of the most talented actors in
Africa.
I have had the
opportunity of working with one or two
very good hands. We had, by the grace of
God, the opportunity of funding and
producing two movies with some
African-Americans. I produced them and
directed one of them. Good Evening is
one of them and it was with Tanya
Martins. The other was with Judy Shekoni.
I mean she’s earmarked to be the biggest
thing in the cinema right now. We made
movies with them and I know their
limitations. I am not saying they are
not awesomely gifted, but in comparison
with our people, there’s still a lot to
be desired from them. What we have here
is the ability to turn nothing into
something. We are yoked with so much
financially, economically and
politically. So, when you compare a
person that’s created so much out of
nothing and the person that seems to
create so much from something, you’ll
understand what we are dealing with.
I’ll prefer to work with an African
actor. When we were shooting the film
with the African-Americans, they were
carrying their laptops, but we were the
ones reminding them of their lines. They
are so used to their laptops that they
loaded their scripts into them. I didn’t
see any need for it. I’m used to being
called up, getting on a flight, and
going to shoot in the next
couple
of hours. And I have to assimilate every
word in that script. And even proffer
advice on it.
Q:
You said actors have not benefitted
financially. How come we keep hearing of
actors earning huge sums per film?
A: Let me give you a picture. We’re
looking at a country of 110 million. We
narrow it down to a city in the US, say
New York. The movie that’s released on
the
big
screen in America is
considered a flop if it sells within the
one to three million bracket. Back here,
our people sell 100,000 copies and it is
considered a huge success. You pay an
actor N1.5 million per picture, which in
foreign exchange means a little over
$10,000. You will not pay a Personal
Assistant of a major
movie
actor abroad $10,000. So there’s
something wrong in the marketing. It may
not be blamed on the actors, the
producer or the demographic in which the
movies are made. Nevertheless, there is
a problem with the distribution. How
come the product is not getting to
everyone they’re targeting. We know that
the home video culture has become
something with a huge impact. So, how
come the movies are not reaching these
target audience? One Dollar, a movie I
made a while back, is the singular most
successful home video made till date. It
sold 250,000 copies in New York alone.
They were pirated copies. I went for a
tour in Minnesota and some guy gave me a
Rolex wristwatch. I asked what I did to
deserve the gift and this dude had the
audacity to tell me to my face that he
alone produced over 50,000 copies of my
tape. And this was his way of giving
back to me. I was torn between slapping
him and accepting the gift. I accepted
the gift. Why would I slap him? How many
will you slap? Besides, it is illegal. I
have a female friend in the CIA. And she
has extensive connections, of course, in
FBI. She told me that a product that is
not protected under US laws cannot be
expected to enjoy protection from
pirates. That is the problem. Our people
will not register with the right bodies;
they want short cuts. Movie marketers in
America approach our producers and flash
$5,000 at them, they go crazy and give
their intellectual property away to
these people. The people, in turn, go to
their basement flats, mass-produce them
and sell them. It’s our intellectual
property. There’s no such thing as
royalties for all the artistes involved
in the job. That is why we are recording
poor sales and that is why N1.5 million
is a big deal in a country of 110
million people.
Q: A while ago, you claimed to be
projecting our culture with movies. But
I have seen you in a couple of movies
with braided hair and you were going to
seek the hand of a girl in marriage. Do
you think that depicts what happens
here, given that you were not cast as a
singer or someone in the arts?
A: Let me tackle it from this angle.
What is the history of matted hair? I
will give you a scenario. If you see a
white guy with matted hair, what is the
first thing that comes to your mind? The
universally accepted opinion will be
that he’s trying to be black. The Benin
people of old, the Hausas, the Fulanis,
our forefathers matted their hair. We
are in a world where the true barriers
we face are in our minds and not in our
environment. We come up with an idea
that you have to have the right papers,
the right background, the right status,
the right creed before you can do
certain things or be in certain
positions. It’s wrong. What has made
America what it is today is its power of
permissiveness.
The power to allow a person that knows
the job to come irrespective of his
looks. You’ll walk into a bank and
you’ll see a man with matted hair in
America and he will happen to be the MD
of that bank. Universally, what is the
singular most potent culture that’s
taking over the world? It’s hip-hop. And
I have the power of choice. Now if I
wake up and decide I want to approach a
female, an intelligent black sister, as
an evangelist and she accepts me as one,
that is my luck. But if she knows I am
not irresponsible, that I have a good
job, I am educated and my only problem
with her is that I have matted hair,
then she has a problem. She has
blockades in her life. So it’s about
acceptance. If you have a problem with a
guy with matted hair coming to visit
your daughter, that is your problem. It
is not shared amongst everybody.
Q: What has been your greatest
achievement in the industry so far?
A: What I’m doing right now. A couple of
years ago, it would have been perfect to
say that the singular biggest passion in
my life is my career. I’ve broken
frontiers I did not think possible and
it’s made me a happy person, creatively.
But recently, I dabbled into something I
hadn’t actually thought of. It is
philanthropy. Recently, I was on a tour
and I saw some blind and deformed
children and I decided to spend a vast
degree of my resources to help them. A
couple of years ago, I would not have
done this. That complete transmutation
is where Iam at right now. It’s all
about what I’m involved in. It touches
you in a way you’ll not comprehend. You
may not even have the capacity to
explain it logically. But it’s something
you need to do because it makes you a
happier person. I’ve been to orphanages
in Zaria and places I never thought I’d
go except for my job. The children
recognised me and were happy that I was
there. They are just people looking for
a word of kindness; a little hope. They
are not desperate. But they are looking
for someone to help. I take their
problems and I bring it to the people
that have the resources to solve them.
And these problems, in earnest, are
solved. Currently, it is the biggest
passion
in my life.
Q: Are you really a public-spirited
person or is it something that was
suggested to you as a Public Relations
thing?
A: The thing is that a lot of people see
it as image laundering, but it’s not. If
I want to do image laundering, I don’t
think I’ll go to the extent I’m going. I
won’t be so involved. My career won’t
even suffer certain consequences. And
again, Nigerians are not very charitable
people. I’ve not known anybody that is
as involved as I am.
I don’t owe anybody any obligations. I’m
still who I am. I’ve not changed in any
way. The only thing that has changed is
my priority. Truthfully, I just got
caught up in something I don’t
understand.

Q:
As a movie idol and sex symbol, how many
conquests have you?
A: You see this movie idol, sex symbol
thing is overrated. If you guys need
something to fill your papers, we’re
easy targets. A lot of people make
themselves available for this. But I’ve
been most elusive. I don’t attend
functions, I am ordinarily very shy and
everybody thinks I suffer a temper
problem, which I don’t deny because I
don’t know how to face confrontation.
So, when you assimilate all that and
break it into the immediate picture of a
sex symbol, it doesn’t even tally. The
difference between me and Mr. B is that
I am constantly under scrutiny. So, Mr.
B could actually be committing more
atrocities. But because the spotlight is
on me, everybody is yelling that mine is
excessive. But that’s not true. I don’t
drink, I don’t smoke, I don’t go to
clubs. I’m a healthy young African male.
Who am I supposed to be sleeping with?
Men?
Q: Would you agree you are a hit with
women?
A: No sir. I grew up with women. I have
six sisters and I am the only guy. I’m
more used to women. My best friends in
the world are women. I hardly trust men.
The men I’ve trusted didn’t work out
well in my life. Some women I sleep
with, some are my best friends. We draw
the line. All the same, we have great
relationships and I will not jeopardise
it with sex. Sex is very complicated.
Q: When are you planning to get
married?
A: Marriage is a belief. Marriage is
something that has to come with the
entirety of your essence–physically,
psychologically, spiritually,
financially. While I’ve achieved some of
that, I am yet to achieve the others.
Women have always been something of a
mystery to me.
Q: What is the relationship between
you and former Vice President Atiku’s
daughter?
A: Zainab Atiku is one of my best
friends. There was a time I went to live
in London and New York for a year and
she was most supportive. She’s still one
of my best friends of all time. She
believed in me and I dare say that some
people saw it is something else. I still
say it is what it is. I know her fiancé.
We met in Brazil. The girl was going to
be married and we were still planning
the marriage till now. I’m even afraid
to say this. But the truth of the matter
is that they blew so much hot air that
it nearly messed up the whole thing. But
it came to a point she said well: ‘If
they are writing all these things, then,
who is feeding them with information.’
People forget you are who you are. And
sometimes it is not necessary. So we did
not have sex. |