Sometime in March 2007, a young man approached one of the leading
lights of filmmaaking and television drama productions in Nigeria and
asked for assistance in order for him to go to a film school in London,
England. This most-respected filmmaker paused and asked the young man:
‘When you are done with your film studies, where do you hope to
practise?‘ The young man answered: ‘I want to practise in Nigeria.‘ The
filmmaker thought for a while and said: ‘Would you consider letting me
train you first, before you go film abroad, learn how things are done
here? You can go to film school afterwards. Think about it and get back
to me.‘ That filmmaker was the creator of Checkmate and Fuji House of
Commotion; the writer and director of Rattlesnake, Violated and Forever.
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young man was me. I didn’t know it at that time, but when I went back
to her about a week later and accepted her offer, I was making one of
the best decisions in my life.
Any
filmmaker worth his salt will know that apprenticeship is the best
thing that can happen to any aspiring filmmaker. The opportunity to
learn from someone who has had hands-on experience is invaluable. While
film schools can be great, depending of what aspect of filmmaking, the
realities of filmmaking are met on the set, not in classes. Prior to my
conversion to film, I had been an actor and director in the theatre for
about ten years, and I had taught literature in a university for three
years. In parts, these endeavours had been fulfilling, yet, there was
something missing.
I had always seen in pictures. Photography had been an integral part
of my life, not as someone who loved to stand in front of a camera but
as someone who wondered how pictures were taken. I had also been brought
up in a home where watching films was a daily ritual. My father was a
film buff. I had therefore decided that to get behind the magic of
pictures, I had to become a filmmaker, and to be a filmmaker, I had to
go to film school. I did eventually go to Raindance Academy in 2008, but
that was after eleven months of practical work with Amaka Igwe.
Today the federal government is honouring Amaka Igwe with an MFR. It
is a well-deserved honour, one that she is eminently qualified for. The
body of work she has produced in her twenty-two years as a major player
in the entertainment industry speak for itself. You will travel far to
find a more respected writer, director and producer in Nollywood, in
spite of the fact that she has released less than ten films in her
career so far.
Her television drama classics like Checkmate and Fuji House of
Commotion have spawn stars for over two decades. Some of the most
respected actors in Nigeria today, people like Richard Mofe-Damijo, Ego
Boyo, Funlola Aofiyebi-Raimi, Kunle Bamtefa, Ngozi Nwosu, the late Toun
Oni, Sola Onayiga, John Njamah, Jude Ororha and many more made their
names from her productions. Great as all of this may be, Amaka Igwe
biggest contribution to the development of the creative industries in
Nigeria goes beyond the films she has made or the actors her works have
made famous. Her greatest contributions, perhaps, remains her
willingness to share all that she knows about filmmaking with anyone
interested.
In 2007, the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE) gave Amaka
Igwe a licence to run a vocational institution for the film and media
studies. This was done in recognition of her personal efforts at
training Nollywood practitioners in the diverse areas of filmmaking,
something she had been doing since 1997 at a personal cost. In 2008 the
Centre for Excellence in Film and Media Studies was born and she handed
it over to me to run, staying in the background and guiding my hands.
In 2009, alongside Highbury College, Portsmouth UK we won a bid for
the British Council Education Partnerships in Africa (EPA) project and
gave, for free, eighty Nigerians the skills needed to make radio
documentary packages.
Some of those trained under that project have gone on to become
screenwriters and directors. In the past one year, the centre has
trained over sixty young filmmakers in screenwriting, directing and
producing. All these young filmmakers have had the opportunity to make
short films, with equipment and post-production facilities given to them
free by Amaka Igwe Studios. In a few weeks from now, we will premiere
‘Big Daddy‘, a short film on rape. This short film, written and directed
by this writer, was only possible because we got immense support from
Amaka Igwe. I like to sit in class at the beginning of a new workshop at
the Centre for Excellence in film and Media Studies.
At the beginning of every class, she would, unfailingly, utter these
words: ‘Ask me anything, don’t be shy and don’t be intimidated. I will
teach you everything I know so you can add to what you already know and
be better than me.‘ She uttered these same words to me five years ago
and she has been true to the last word. Therein lies the true greatness
of Amaka Igwe: her selflessness; her willingness to make others better,
her conviction that knowledge is best shared. This is really why the
federal government is honouring her. On behalf of all those you continue
to inspire; on behalf of all your students; on behalf of those whose
careers you have helped to nurture, THANK YOU!
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