Connect with us

Celebrities

Why Genevieve Dumped Me – Okechukwu Joseph

Published

on

Determined to make a difference, Okechukwu Joseph ventured into the movie industry but after about a decade, the actor believed that he had not made the desired change. and so he travelled to the United States where he enrolled at the New York Film Academy. The result of this is a soon-to-be released movie entitled, Second Chance. In an interview with Christian Agadibe, Joseph talks about his new film, aborted romance with star actress, Genevieve Nnaji and his plans for Nollywood.

How does it feel to come back home after your academic sojourn in America?
I am more than happy to be home. It was strictly an academic sojourn. I got into the movie industry in 1996, shot my first movie in 1997 and 10 years later, I felt it was a good time for some upgrade at the New York Film Academy at Universal Studios; Hollywood was the best choice I ever made. I loved every bit of my experience there. It was life changing.
What project have you been able to accomplish after school and are there any specific benefits of your return to Nollywood?
After I finished from film school I produced a movie in Maryland. The movie is entitled Second Chance. Ever since I have had a few post-production hiccups here and there but thank God, all those are giving way now and Second Chance will soon be released in Nigeria. I am excited to announce that one of the big Hollywood producers/directors with whom I went into partnership some years back is finally here in Nigeria for good. He brought loads of hi-tech equipment and there is now a huge studio set up in Calabar. We intend to extend production services to different parts of the country at a rate never before heard of. The idea is to encourage professional filmmaking without breaking the bank. And we also want to start connecting our Nollywood producers with foreign distribution outlets in America, Europe and beyond.
Did you play a role in the movie?
Of course! I acted in the movie. I was one of the lead characters.
What do you like about the character you played?
The role I played was very sensitive and tasking. It was a challenge I was very happy to take. It had way too many significant transitions and each transition pulled the same amount of energy and required even higher concentration and focus than the previous. It tells you how strong the story was. I conceived the story, took about 18 months to piece it together and finally wrote it in the Netherlands.
Before you left the country, which was the last movie you featured in?
Alice My First Lady! I played Amadi. I married two wives – Alice and Akunne. Alice was the first and for some reasons, I paid a terrible price for my choice of a second wife, Akunne. Alice beat the crap out of my rather fragile Akunne. I think a lot of people like that movie. I do too. Very hilarious! I have featured in over a hundred movies but every time I step out all I hear is ‘Amadi, Alice’s husband’. Or you see some women clapping their hands and cracking up at the sight of me. Ladies laugh me to stupor sometimes because they see me as the weakling of a man who made Alice their perfect symbol of defiant womanhood.
Growing up, were there signs that pointed you in this direction?
Yes. I come from a family of five. I have just a brother and a sister. So, usually, when I was much younger, I would spontaneously just entertain my family and make everybody laugh especially my mother. I could mimic like crazy. Actually, my mom thought I would become a comedian so she fought so hard to distract me from the entertainment industry. You see, she enjoyed my performances but she wanted me to be an engineer because her other son is a medical doctor and the girl is a lawyer. But hey, I am who I am and I have absolutely no regrets.
 What is the craziest thing a fan has done to you?
A female fan once brought out her breast in an open place and gave me a marker to sign on it. It was very bizarre. I begged her to let me sign on her chest and she insisted. Trust me I had no choice. I did it! Just made sure my hands were at the upper end of the marker pen.
What is your kind of woman?
Classy, clean and confident.
Has any one of your female colleagues ever solicited sex from you while in the process of shooting?
Truth is a lot of people didn’t know that all that while that I was shooting movies everywhere I was still a virgin! I didn’t know how to explain this to ladies especially. People thought I had other strange feelings. One of my directors even confronted me at some point wanting to know if I was hiding some ailment. It was on the set of this director that two young women attempted to rape me in my hotel room. I will never forget this. It was Singapore Hotel, Ikeja, where we lodged. The movie was Karishika 2. We had returned from a shoot so I left my door open. They came in, stripped themselves halfway and pounced on me. I fought with them for nearly 25 minutes. They gave up when I threatened to stab them. I lied that I had a knife. That was probably the third time that I had had that kind of experience.
Were they your colleagues?
Of course! They were upcoming artistes. They were also part of that movie. Everybody else was fair game, but I was ‘forming superman’ so I could understand their frustration. And they were a crazy bunch. You don’t come across girls like that every day – whether in Nollywood or elsewhere. It was something else.
 Why did you find it difficult to mingle like others?
I had no difficulty mingling. What I had issues with was entangling- copulating. And like I said earlier, I wasn’t ready because I was a virgin and I didn’t want to tell anybody. I was always making excuses about why I couldn’t ‘get down.’ In fact this is one of the reasons my very short relationship with Genevieve was such a disaster. This is the first time I am admitting this publicly. Genny and I met and became friends on the set of Mark of the Beast. Of course in her very early days. It was as though we were in some type of experiment. But I learned a lot about her within that short period. Two unforgettable moments- the day she introduced her little brother to me and the day she told me literally everything about herself. She trusted me that much. My mind was racing like crazy and I kept wondering how so little people knew about this young Amazon who was out to play the Esther for her family and did she? She felt like family to me. Unfortunately, we couldn’t go further because of my funny little ‘virgin’ secret. Not that she solicited or asked for anything but of course, my body language was downright repulsive to that effect and it didn’t take anything for any woman with brains to figure it out. She was so full of pragmatic energy and so on-the-go- like woman on a mission. Never ready to play around with stuff she couldn’t put up with. I hope she’s still that way. She has got an incredible story to her glory.
If you have that kind of opportunity with Genevieve again, would you take things to the next level?
I don’t know what you mean by ‘the next level.’ But I would love to play by my rules book at this moment. However, there is not going to be any such opportunity. The young woman has moved on ever so predictably and I’m the happiest for her.
How do you handle those fans coming to you with crazy demands?
If you can’t grant some one’s crazy demands, it simply means that what you have to offer is incompatible with what they’re looking for. So offer what you have. In other words, deploy your self control parachute as politely and diplomatically as you possibly can. You don’t want to get unnecessarily caught up in an ever blazing fan fury. It hurts sometimes.
Aside acting, what else do you do on the side?
I do business. I’m obsessed with new technology. At the moment there is a revolutionary product that I have been promoting in Nigeria. It is known as Atmospheric Water Generator. It is like a regular water dispenser but in reality, as the name implies, it produces water out of thin air. I mean pure, clean, drinking water from humidity! Water produced by this machine is regarded as the purest, cleanest drinking water known to mankind today. It is more than business and I see it as a mission that is why I went into it. You can read more about my business on Fountain Royale Atmospheric Water Generator. Or check it on our website at Aquavolve LLC where you will see machines that are capable of producing as much as 5,000 liters a day from the humidity in the air. Whole neighborhoods can be supplied and boreholes could be a thing of the past with our machines.
Now that you are back in town, what should fans expect from you?
Fans should expect some really good stuff from me. I have done like five movies and one TV series since I returned from the United States. I am currently working on a few others.

Joseph-259x300

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Celebrities

In 1960, I Started Afrobeat In Ibadan, Gave Fela Platform, Band Members To Start His Own Band In 1964 – Orlando Julius

Published

on

An old interview with late legendary Nigerian musician Orlando Julius has resurfaced on social media, reigniting debates about the origins of Afrobeat amid the ongoing controversy involving award-winning singer Wizkid and Seun Kuti, the son of Afrobeat pioneer Fela Anikulapo Kuti.
In the archival interview with Agbaletu TV, Orlando Julius boldly claimed that he pioneered Afrobeat long before Fela Kuti popularised the genre, stating that he began the sound in 1960.
“I started Afrobeat in Nigeria in 1960,” Julius said, adding that “there was never anyone making music in any form close to Afrobeat at the time.”
He traced his musical roots to his childhood in Ikole Ekiti, where he developed an early passion for music through his family and school environment. “I was born in Ikole Ekiti. My dad was Osomalo. That was where I was schooled, and I was one of the band boys of St. Peter’s Anglican School, Ikole Ekiti. Music had been in my blood since then, and my mother played a role in my fondness for music because when we finished eating after getting home from school, I used to sing at night for my mother, who was an Aso Ofi fabric maker,” he recounted.
Julius also expressed gratitude to the late Premier of Western Nigeria, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, for his role in shaping his musical journey. He recalled how Awolowo’s initiative to provide musical instruments helped many young Nigerians learn music professionally.
“When my dad died, I dropped out of high school and left Ekiti for Ibadan when Obafemi Awolowo was the Premier of Western Nigeria around 1956. I devoted my full interest in music in 1957 because Obafemi Awolowo was a music lover who also loved his hometown,” he said.
He added, “He called the Action Group and suggested they buy a lot of musical instruments that could be enough for about 30 bands… That was where I learnt music and where I learnt my first instrument… It was at the place I learnt how to play alto sax, saxophone, and drumset. I play drums very well and also guitar.”
On how he coined the term Afrobeat, Julius explained that the name emerged organically from audiences who were curious about his sound.
“When we started playing in Ibadan… whenever people asked what kind of music we were playing, I always told them it was Afrobeat. The reason I called it Afrobeat was that… I listened to Cuban music, Caribbean music, Kenyan music, South African music, and others. So, I put them all together. That is where Afro comes from. Afro is African, and those people are descendants. That’s how Afrobeat started,” he said.
He also insisted that Fela Kuti was not active in music when he founded his band. “No,” he said when asked if Fela was already singing, adding that he only started hearing about him in 1963. Julius recalled how Fela later joined his band on stage as a guest trumpeter and even recruited some of his musicians when he formed Koola Lobitos in Lagos.
“Every time Fela came, he always played trumpet on our stage… When it was time for him to start his own band called Koola Lobitos, I released three members of my band to follow him to Lagos,” he revealed.
The interview has gone viral again following Wizkid’s controversial remarks about Fela and the ensuing social media feud with Seun Kuti, which reopened conversations about legacy, influence, and the true origins of Afrobeat. While Fela Kuti remains globally celebrated as the genre’s architect, Orlando Julius’ claims highlight the layered and contested history behind one of Africa’s most influential musical movements.

Continue Reading

Celebrities

Simi and Adekunle Gold Welcome Twins, Expand Their Family in Joyful New Chapter

Published

on

Popular Nigerian music couple Simi and Adekunle Gold have welcomed twins, marking a joyful new chapter in their family life.

The exciting news, which surfaced earlier this year, has been met with an outpouring of love and congratulatory messages from fans, fellow celebrities, and well-wishers across social media. Although the couple have remained characteristically private about the details, the announcement has sparked widespread excitement among admirers of the duo.

Simi and Adekunle Gold, who tied the knot in 2019, are known not just for their musical success but also for keeping their family life largely away from the public eye. The arrival of twins further strengthens their growing family and deepens the love story that fans have followed over the years.

The couple already shared a daughter, Deja, and the birth of twins adds another beautiful layer to their journey as parents. Supporters have praised the pair for balancing stardom with family, often describing them as one of Nigeria’s most admired celebrity couples.

Since the news broke, social media platforms have been flooded with congratulatory messages, prayers, and warm wishes, with many fans expressing excitement and gratitude for the growing family.

As they embrace this new phase of parenthood, Simi and Adekunle Gold continue to inspire fans with their music, love story, and commitment to family.

Continue Reading

Celebrities

“Don’t Be Deceived by Twitter Polls or Social Media Hype” – Burna Boy Advises Fellow Artists

Published

on

Grammy-winning artist Burna Boy has offered some candid advice to fellow musicians, urging them not to get carried away by online popularity.

In a message shared via his Instagram Stories, Burna warned artists not to be fooled by Twitter polls or the support of Nigerian social media fans, pointing out that this virtual applause rarely translates into real-world success—especially when it comes to filling stadiums around the globe.

He emphasized that achieving a number one spot on streaming platforms in Nigeria shouldn’t be seen as the pinnacle of success. Instead, he encouraged artists to set bigger goals or consider having alternative business ventures.

His post read:

> “Dear artists,
Don’t let Twitter polls and Naija social media fans deceive you. They won’t fill up any stadium for you in any part of the world.
Your song being Number 1 on any streaming platform in Nigeria is not something to celebrate. Aim higher or do other businesses on the side. I type with love. No sign of aw.”

In a similar vein, singer Spyro also had a message for upcoming acts. He advised that signing to a major label or linking up with a top artist is no guarantee of success. According to Spyro, having a “failure mentality”—where one expects everything to be handed to them—will only lead to amplified failure, no matter how big the platform.

He stressed the importance of diligence and hard work, stating that talent alone isn’t enough. Spyro urged emerging artists to stop chasing fantasies and start putting in real effort to build their careers.

Continue Reading

Trending