Patience Ozokwor
Posted by Nigeriamovies.net on
Ola Balogun
Hubert Ogunde
Erick is the President of CALLYWOOD. A very talented young man full of energy and
Olu Jacobs
Nuella Njubigbo
Lola Alao
Tonto Dike
Rukky Sanda
Susan Patrick
Ernest Obi - Actor/ Producer/Director
Emem Isong - Screen Play Writer/Producer
Hilda Dokubo
Tony Umez
Nkiru Sylvanus
Segun Arinze
Bukky Wright
StephNora Okere Falana
Alex Usifo
Stella Damasus-Aboderin
Rita Dominic
Omotola Ekeinde
Oge Okoye
Ngozi Ezeonu
Kanayo .O. Kanayo
Georgina Onuoha
Benita Nzeribe
Enebeli Elebuwa
Ramsey Nouah
Patience Ozokwor
Jim Iyke
Ini Edo
Bimbo Akintola
Joke Silva
Saint Obi
Desmond Elliot
Jennifer Chioma Eliogu
Emeka Ike
Keppy Bassey Ekpenyong
John Okafor ( Mr Ibu)
Caroline Ekanem
Kate Henshaw-Nuttal
Oby Edozie
Uche Jombo
Shan George
Zack Orji
Nkem Owoh
Michael Ezuruonye
Kenneth Okonkwo
Genevieve Nnaji
Richard Mofe Damijo
Clarion Chukwura
Chioma Chukwuka
Chidi Mokeme
Charles Okafor
Chinedu /Osita
Ibinabo Fiberesima
Kalu Ikeagwu
Bob-Manuel Obidimma Udokwu
Ejike Asiegbu
Eucharia Anunobi-Ekwu
Pat Attah
Chidi Ihezie-Okafor
Pete Edochie
Liz Benson
Onyeka Onwenu
Dakore Egbuson
Clem Ohameze
Fred Aseroma
JT Tom West
Chiege Alisigwe
Maureen Solomon
Sola Sobowale
Zulu Adigwe
Ebube Nwagbo
Monalisa Chinda
Grace Amah
Thelma Okoduwa
Sharon Ezeamaka
Mercy Johnson
Emem Isong
Uche Ama Abriel ( Osotule)
Justus Esiri
Francis Duru
Uche Iwuji
Johnpaul Nwadike
Ada Ameh
Chika Ike
Sam Loco Efe
Lilian Bach
Emeka Enyiocha
Nobert Young
Jide Kosoko
Steph-Nora Okere
Segun Arinze
Nkiru Sylvanus
Ekwi Onwuemene
Tony Umez
Hilda Dokubo
Ebele Okaro
Nonso Diobi
Amaechi Muonagor
Emeka Okoro
Alex Lopez
Yemi Blaq
Jummai Joseph
Fred Amata
Moses Armstrong
Ufuoma Ejonobor
Ofiafuluagu Mbaka
Empress Njamah
Susan Patrick
Rita Edochie
Adaora Ukoh
Sam Dede
Emma Ayalogu
Saidi Balogun
Ashley Nwosu
Jennifer Awazie
Sandra Achums
Victor Osuagwu
Azizat Sadiq
Kelvin Ideduba
Jackie Appiah
Bukky Ajayi
Yemi Solade
Eric Nwadinobi
Regina Askia
Chiwetalu Agu
Cynthia Agholor
Charles Novia
Uche Elendu
Femi Brainard
Chigozie Atuanya
King Joe Okechukwu
Lanre Balogun
Franca Brown
Charles Inojie
Tuvi James
Abergail Brigette Plaatjes
Okey Bakassi
Paul Obazele
Anita Hogan
Akindele Olufunke Ayotunde
Sam Uche Anyamele
Name: Racheal Tabuno Oniga
Hank Anuku
Uchenna Ogbodo
2Face Idibia
Gentle Jack
Jim Lawson Maduike
Rich Oganiru
Joan Agabi
Lancelot Imasuen
Padita Agu
Benedict Johnson
Kenneth Chukwu
Funmi Holder
Mark Georgewill
Patrick Doyle
Fabian Adibe
Yvonne Jegede
Peter Bruno
Michael Okon
Nana Ama McBrown
Chinelo Ndigwe
Ngozi Nwosu
Afam Okereke
Akume Akume
Uche Michael
Oby Kechere (Ms Koi Koi)
Camilla Mberekpe
Larry Koldsweat
Ijeoma Imo
Mary Uranta
Smith Asante
Emeka Ossai
Chris Bassey
Rita Nzelu
Thelma Nwosu
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Ine Ikpe
Nadia Buari
Emeka Ani
Sophia Tchidi Chikere
Blessing Effiom
Barbara Ukattah
Remi Oshodi
Ladi Torty
Judith Mazagwu
Chinyere Wilfred
Darlene Benson-Cobham
Van Vicker
Queen Nwokoye
Femi Branch
Tonto Dike
Vida Darko
Omoni Eboli
Juliet Ibrahim
Lola Alao
Dickson Iroegbu
Jeta Amata
Mary Remy
Ifeoma Okeke
Vanessa Nzediegwu
Ada Aronu
Nuella Njubigbo
Nse Ikpe Etim
Leo Mezie
Omoni Oboli Sophie
Funke Akindele
Teco Benson
Yvonne Nelson
Profile of Majid Michel
Ecow Smith-Asante
Robert Peters
Sunday Omobolanle (Papa Aluwe)
Nathaniel Ruskin
Mrs Patience Uzokwor is a popular actress who plays the role of a wicked woman so well. In fact, many people find it difficult to separate her role in drama from her actions in real life.
Besides, when Uzokwor is not playing one of her negative roles, she is likely playing that of an old Mama Youngy - the type she played in the movie, Old School, which eventually earned her the name Mama Gee.
A proud and caring mother of four, Uzokwor's first son is an engineer while the last is a footballer with Rangers International of Enugu.
Although she lost her husband a few years ago to a terminal disease, Uzokwor was full of joy and gratitude to God for her achievements in the entertainment world. The actress recalled her days as a teacher, broadcaster and owner of a fashion institute before she went into acting by accident or better still, as fate would have it.
The beginning
I come from a humble family here in Ngwo. My village is Amaobo. I attended Abimbola Gibson Memorial School, Lagos. I gained admission into Methodist Girls, Yaba but it was in the heat of the political crisis that later culminated into the civil war, so we had to relocate to Enugu.
My father insisted that I was too young to be in the secondary school and that I should go back to Elementary five. I obeyed him and went two steps backwards in my education and later re-wrote the Common Entrance Examinations that I had earlier passed in Lagos. I got admitted to Girls Secondary School, Ngwo, where I had my entire secondary education and on completion, my result was not good. I took the private G.C.E and passed all my papers. I got married immediately afterwards.
Later on, I attended Teachers Training College in Afikpo from where I proceeded to IMT Enugu where I studied Fine and Applied Arts, specialising in Graphics. But I never practiced for one day. Initially, I never had the intention of joining the film industry. I did not even know anything about the industry. I was a teacher by training and I taught for about four years before venturing into broadcasting. I was employed as an announcer with FRCN Enugu and was later retrenched when they closed down all the medium wave band stations. I went into business.
Acting career
During my teacher training days in Afikpo, I had a competent Literature teacher who made us present a play each term. When it was the turn of my set to present a play, I was given the Role of Hamlet in William Shakespeare's play of the same title and the production came out fine. Other schools that offered Hamlet as a subject paid to watch our production. In fact, we were invited to stage the play in so many other places in Eastern Nigeria. I was very popular then and everywhere I went people were calling me Hamlet. But after the teachers' training, I forgot everything about drama until I went into Radio Nigeria.
Retrenchment
I was really angry when I was retrenched because I was enjoying my job. I even tried to go back there, not because of the salary but because I found fulfillment doing the things that I was doing on radio. People knew me then as Madam Social because whenever anyone was on transfer, I would be the one to organise the send forth and also to prepare food for fellow staff members. My appointment was terminated under General Buhari on January 4, 1985 and there was no way I would ever forget that date because it was a date that I felt that I was unduly robbed of something that I really cherished.
How Zebrudaya discovered me
It was Chika Okpala (Chief Zebrudaya of New Masquarades) that invited me to take part in a commercial in which I played the wife of Pete Eneh. The commercial was a mass orientation promo by the Anambra State Government to encourage her citizens to acquire education before venturing into trading.
After the promo was shot, there was this positive reaction from the people, and Chief Zebrudaya himself was so impressed that he said, what have you been doing with yourself, where are you, I am so impressed.' He later confessed he never knew that he was doing the right thing by inviting me for the commercial. When Pete Eneh had the opportunity of shooting a serial (Someone Cares) for a television station, he gave me the lead role. During the shooting of the serial, many of the established faces that saw me commended me. They urged me not to light the candle and keep it under the table.
But as a member of the Scripture Union, I just felt that coming into Nollywood would give me an unnecessary exposure and secondly I was very shy. But those of them that wanted me on board were adamant until they succeeded in pulling me in and I was pleasantly surprised the way I rose in the industry.
After my first movie in 1998, I was already being recognised by people. But when I did Authority (1999), the movie became very popular and it really shot me into limelight. After Authority, I have been moving from one movie set to the another by the grace of God.
Mother in Nollywood
For a long time now people have started calling me Mother Africa. I have played the role of a mother to almost every prominent actor in Nollywood. I usually joke with Olu Jacobs. I tell him, It is only you and Pete Edochie that have refused to let me play your mother'.
Playing bad roles
When I play the role of a bad woman, I see myself at that instance as a mirror through which I want society to see and appreciate the fact that it is not good to be bad. This is the reason I do it with so much passion that it becomes almost believable and by extention, I also see such roles as an opportunity to minister to lost and wicked souls that jealousy, hatred, envy and all the likes can only bring one to ruins.
Entering into character
Surprisingly, I am very lazy at reading scripts over and over again. As soon as a script is given to me, I get into the character as soon as I read a few lines from any scene in the script and to tell you the truth, it baffles even me that I can perform such near magical acts.
I give all the glory to God because I think it is part of the special gift he has deposited in me. A few glances at the script easily exposes me to my character and once I discover this, I would proceed to getting the lines into my head and of course, adding some other things that would make my role stand out. The way I memorise lines baffles me and once I get the lines in, it takes a long time for me to forget them.
Movies
I have lost count of how many movies I have taken part in. Initially, I tried to keep the records because sometimes you run from one production to the other that you may not even give an accurate date or month of the year, let alone keeping records of the movies one has been involved in. But I can say that I have done more than 200 movies to date.
Advice
Don't ever go into anything because someone else is making name from it. Go into something because you have a talent in it. We must try and discover our own talents - that is the only way to move forward in life.
My fans
I want to thank my fans for the interest they have shown in me and for the movies I have featured in. They have made me what I am today, because if they don't like me, no producers would give me important roles to play.
I want to encourage some of them that see me as their role model to join the industry. They should come in with the talents God has given them and discover themselves the more.
I also encourage all my fans to keep being there for me. I will continue, by the grace of God, to improve on every new movie that I do and I will always keep them happy.
Improving others
Women around me always feel my impact. A lot of girls here do run into trouble and when they come to me, I always give my support. A lady in the movie industry who lost her parents got pregnant and when I discovered, I threatened her that if she aborted the baby, I would hand her over to the police.
Later, I took her to my house and took care of her until she delivered a baby girl. I am still taking care of the baby girl right now while the mother is back to her career. I do such for girls and I also advice them not to have sex outside marriage. I hate abortion with a passion so if any girl should get careless and get pregnant, let her come to Mama Gee and I will shelter her so that she does not destroy God's special gift.
In addition, I help widows and other women to create job opportunities for themselves and sometimes for their sons and daughters. I think they feel the impact and are happy with me that I am a woman like them. I always tell women to be faithful to their husbands and they should stop behaving like widows while their husbands are still alive.
Building in my husband's name
Most widows in this town are really encouraged by my story because I was able to build a house on my late husband's ancestral land. He could not build one in his lifetime but I really thank God that through acting, I (a poor widow) was able to build a roof over my children's head.
My legacy
I want to be remembered for helping humanity, I want to touch any life that crosses my way, no matter how small the impact is.
Besides, when Uzokwor is not playing one of her negative roles, she is likely playing that of an old Mama Youngy - the type she played in the movie, Old School, which eventually earned her the name Mama Gee.
A proud and caring mother of four, Uzokwor's first son is an engineer while the last is a footballer with Rangers International of Enugu.
Although she lost her husband a few years ago to a terminal disease, Uzokwor was full of joy and gratitude to God for her achievements in the entertainment world. The actress recalled her days as a teacher, broadcaster and owner of a fashion institute before she went into acting by accident or better still, as fate would have it.
The beginning
I come from a humble family here in Ngwo. My village is Amaobo. I attended Abimbola Gibson Memorial School, Lagos. I gained admission into Methodist Girls, Yaba but it was in the heat of the political crisis that later culminated into the civil war, so we had to relocate to Enugu.
My father insisted that I was too young to be in the secondary school and that I should go back to Elementary five. I obeyed him and went two steps backwards in my education and later re-wrote the Common Entrance Examinations that I had earlier passed in Lagos. I got admitted to Girls Secondary School, Ngwo, where I had my entire secondary education and on completion, my result was not good. I took the private G.C.E and passed all my papers. I got married immediately afterwards.
Later on, I attended Teachers Training College in Afikpo from where I proceeded to IMT Enugu where I studied Fine and Applied Arts, specialising in Graphics. But I never practiced for one day. Initially, I never had the intention of joining the film industry. I did not even know anything about the industry. I was a teacher by training and I taught for about four years before venturing into broadcasting. I was employed as an announcer with FRCN Enugu and was later retrenched when they closed down all the medium wave band stations. I went into business.
Acting career
During my teacher training days in Afikpo, I had a competent Literature teacher who made us present a play each term. When it was the turn of my set to present a play, I was given the Role of Hamlet in William Shakespeare's play of the same title and the production came out fine. Other schools that offered Hamlet as a subject paid to watch our production. In fact, we were invited to stage the play in so many other places in Eastern Nigeria. I was very popular then and everywhere I went people were calling me Hamlet. But after the teachers' training, I forgot everything about drama until I went into Radio Nigeria.
Retrenchment
I was really angry when I was retrenched because I was enjoying my job. I even tried to go back there, not because of the salary but because I found fulfillment doing the things that I was doing on radio. People knew me then as Madam Social because whenever anyone was on transfer, I would be the one to organise the send forth and also to prepare food for fellow staff members. My appointment was terminated under General Buhari on January 4, 1985 and there was no way I would ever forget that date because it was a date that I felt that I was unduly robbed of something that I really cherished.
How Zebrudaya discovered me
It was Chika Okpala (Chief Zebrudaya of New Masquarades) that invited me to take part in a commercial in which I played the wife of Pete Eneh. The commercial was a mass orientation promo by the Anambra State Government to encourage her citizens to acquire education before venturing into trading.
After the promo was shot, there was this positive reaction from the people, and Chief Zebrudaya himself was so impressed that he said, what have you been doing with yourself, where are you, I am so impressed.' He later confessed he never knew that he was doing the right thing by inviting me for the commercial. When Pete Eneh had the opportunity of shooting a serial (Someone Cares) for a television station, he gave me the lead role. During the shooting of the serial, many of the established faces that saw me commended me. They urged me not to light the candle and keep it under the table.
But as a member of the Scripture Union, I just felt that coming into Nollywood would give me an unnecessary exposure and secondly I was very shy. But those of them that wanted me on board were adamant until they succeeded in pulling me in and I was pleasantly surprised the way I rose in the industry.
After my first movie in 1998, I was already being recognised by people. But when I did Authority (1999), the movie became very popular and it really shot me into limelight. After Authority, I have been moving from one movie set to the another by the grace of God.
Mother in Nollywood
For a long time now people have started calling me Mother Africa. I have played the role of a mother to almost every prominent actor in Nollywood. I usually joke with Olu Jacobs. I tell him, It is only you and Pete Edochie that have refused to let me play your mother'.
Playing bad roles
When I play the role of a bad woman, I see myself at that instance as a mirror through which I want society to see and appreciate the fact that it is not good to be bad. This is the reason I do it with so much passion that it becomes almost believable and by extention, I also see such roles as an opportunity to minister to lost and wicked souls that jealousy, hatred, envy and all the likes can only bring one to ruins.
Entering into character
Surprisingly, I am very lazy at reading scripts over and over again. As soon as a script is given to me, I get into the character as soon as I read a few lines from any scene in the script and to tell you the truth, it baffles even me that I can perform such near magical acts.
I give all the glory to God because I think it is part of the special gift he has deposited in me. A few glances at the script easily exposes me to my character and once I discover this, I would proceed to getting the lines into my head and of course, adding some other things that would make my role stand out. The way I memorise lines baffles me and once I get the lines in, it takes a long time for me to forget them.
Movies
I have lost count of how many movies I have taken part in. Initially, I tried to keep the records because sometimes you run from one production to the other that you may not even give an accurate date or month of the year, let alone keeping records of the movies one has been involved in. But I can say that I have done more than 200 movies to date.
Advice
Don't ever go into anything because someone else is making name from it. Go into something because you have a talent in it. We must try and discover our own talents - that is the only way to move forward in life.
My fans
I want to thank my fans for the interest they have shown in me and for the movies I have featured in. They have made me what I am today, because if they don't like me, no producers would give me important roles to play.
I want to encourage some of them that see me as their role model to join the industry. They should come in with the talents God has given them and discover themselves the more.
I also encourage all my fans to keep being there for me. I will continue, by the grace of God, to improve on every new movie that I do and I will always keep them happy.
Improving others
Women around me always feel my impact. A lot of girls here do run into trouble and when they come to me, I always give my support. A lady in the movie industry who lost her parents got pregnant and when I discovered, I threatened her that if she aborted the baby, I would hand her over to the police.
Later, I took her to my house and took care of her until she delivered a baby girl. I am still taking care of the baby girl right now while the mother is back to her career. I do such for girls and I also advice them not to have sex outside marriage. I hate abortion with a passion so if any girl should get careless and get pregnant, let her come to Mama Gee and I will shelter her so that she does not destroy God's special gift.
In addition, I help widows and other women to create job opportunities for themselves and sometimes for their sons and daughters. I think they feel the impact and are happy with me that I am a woman like them. I always tell women to be faithful to their husbands and they should stop behaving like widows while their husbands are still alive.
Building in my husband's name
Most widows in this town are really encouraged by my story because I was able to build a house on my late husband's ancestral land. He could not build one in his lifetime but I really thank God that through acting, I (a poor widow) was able to build a roof over my children's head.
My legacy
I want to be remembered for helping humanity, I want to touch any life that crosses my way, no matter how small the impact is.