The Characteristic nostalgia that
accompanies the arrival of summer in Europe had just
begun to take root in July 1995 when
my manager, Pierino (who apart from controlling
some celebrated rock groups, ran one
of the most successful modeling agencies in Milan) asked me if I could help him find a
good mulatto model from Nigeria since he had exhausted his search in Italy
without getting exactly what he wanted. I picked up the flight ticket with enthusiasm and
within one week I was back home in Lagos. I visited all the reputable modeling
agencies in town, albeit unsuccessful, most of the models here could use a gym and
a strict vegetarian diet for 365 days.
Finally, I reluctantly gave up,
concentrating my energy on collecting paintings and craft for the annual Gik
Exhibition of Nigerian Arts and Culture in Milan. It was in
one of these fine arts depots that I
found Lillian Bach – slim chocolate-complexioned
lady of astonishing beauty. From her
gait, motion and charisma, I knew she was a
professional model and that I have
found Perino’s treasure. Unknown to me, I was in for a surprise. Lillian Bach was not
leaving Nigeria for anywhere. Fancy a model who would
Lillian Bach was born on November 9.
1970 at Island Maternity Hospital, Lagos,
to a Nigerian mother and a Polish
father, Mr. Bach, who was a mechanical engineer
working for Overseas Construction
Company, (presently known as Habour Work
Limited). Unfortunately he fell ill
and was rushed to Holland, and that was the last thing Lillian knew about her father.
Shortly after education at Idi-Araba
High School, she plunged into the world of modeling, not only she was aware of
her beauty and talent, but also because she felt the
charitable need to support her
mother and other members of her family. She soon became the breadwinner.
With her looks, on-the-job training, natural talent and discipline, Miss Bach has
been able to register her timbre on the Nigerian modeling and fashion industry as one
of the few professionals who make their living almost exclusively from modeling. Although, I have known Lillian for
more than eight years, I still needed to spend three weeks with her, taking her
from audition to shooting location, to appreciate the pressures that models can be under.
Every single day of the three weeks I had to drive Miss Bach to at least ten
advertising agencies. Her basic compulsion was the love for photography. “I like taking
photographs and I love what I see in the pictures. I love what I look like, you know I like to
change my looks too, maybe when I’m wearing a different hairstyle and a different makeup, I
would want to take a photography and see what I look
‘So you realize that you are a very
beautiful lady?’ I inquire jokingly. Miss Bach
chuckles, ‘people say that I don’t
know’. Her modesty is overwhelming. Besides sheer
beauty, she is photogenic, which is
why the photo-modeling agencies find her irresistible.
Lillian once complained about the
yardstick for beauty in Africa.
‘What is considered beautiful here
in Africa is not what they count as beauty
elsewhere, maybe that’s why I don’t
see myself as being beautiful because what we count as beautiful here is when you’re on
the fat side. If don’t have flesh, you are not beautiful here’ pointing a finger at her
skinny, ebony black mother.
somewhat warm. I suggested that
since her schedule was full, it was implicit that some
people thought she was pretty enough
to project their company’s products. That was
before she augmented her weight by
eating all kinds of fatty foods. Another complex of reality of Nigerian modeling is that
the more popular the model gets, the less jobs come her way. The opposite is the case in
nations were modeling is well established.
Lillian Bola Bach has appeared in
calendar for P/Z., G.M. Motors, Guinness, Soft
Touch Beauty Products, Delta Soap,
Collectibles etc. she has done fashion shows for
Aroya Courtoun, a French fashion
house in Paris and many magazine covers and T.V
commercials.
‘How lucrative is modeling in
Nigeria?’
‘It doesn’t really pay much, they
always say it is still developing in Nigeria; first of all
you can’t call yourself a model and
stay at home and get a modeling job, you must be
registered with an agency then your
agents beings the jobs for you and he takes 30
percent out of any job he brings for
you. The way it works is like this, the manufacturing company contacts an advertising
firm, the advertising firm in turn contacts the modeling agency which then contacts the
models, too many fingers in the pie resulting in the model earning peanuts’.
Modeling fee is regularized by A. A.
M. Nevertheless, the agencies get
around the fixed charges and underpay the models. For Lillian Bach, the good thing is that
she can choose her jobs, reserving the privilege of rejecting any job that does not
match the heights she has attained in the industry.
‘I investigate properly before going
in for a job because I wouldn’t want something that would project me
negatively because of my present standard. I am known as one of the top models, I wouldn’t
want to bring down the industry’. For Miss Bach whose mother is seamstress, fashion
designing started as a hobby before she was trained by her elder sister who is a fashion
designer: ‘I love drawing and designing, I don’t like
things that are too common, when I
see a particular design, I look at it to see if I can turn it around. I like creativity that is
why I opened Bacola Discoveries, which is involved not only in fashion, but also in bakery
and make-up!’
After meeting Miss Bach, I sincerely
felt that she was wasting her talent as a
pioneer in an UN-lucrative industry.
I suggested that she went into acting, which
obviously held a better future for
practitioners, but she did not know where to get started. I was aware that the movie industry
was dying for white actors and actresses and this was a gap that she could fill.
Once again, I started driving her to
where a friend of mine was casting for two
movies, “The Drought Promise” and
“Killer Priest”, I called him, booked an appointment and brought Lillian. Those became
her first films, thereafter, I took her to the Ejiro brother Zeb and Chico, members of the Ejiro film dynasty, who have controlled the Nigerian movie industry for decades and whose loyalty to my pioneering effort in the industry is indubitable, and all the other producers that cannot say no to me,
and today Miss Bach is celebrated as Nigeria’s most beautiful actress with hit movies
like “High Street Girls”, “Mothers Help”, “Eja Osan”. I was proud to appear with her in Zeb
Ejiro’s tv soap opera, “Candlelight” from which she moved into Wale Adenuga's Superstory and an endless slew of motion pictures. The ensuing astronomical success that fired her unto the TV screens of most families in Africa and the Diaspora is the most
interesting aspect of driving Lillian Bach.
BOB EJIKE
No comments:
Post a Comment