MY FATHER WAS AFRICA’S FIRST FILMMAKER: FRED AMATA.
By BOB EJIKE
Not even
Professor Ola Rotimi’s warnings prepared me for the financial trauma and
deprivation that I was going to face as a pioneer Nigerian professional actor
after my National Youth Service in the 80s. So dehumanizing was it that when I
eventually managed to leave the shores of Nigeria on economic exile and found
gainful employment as a teacher and musician in Italy, I was certain that I had
had it with Nigerian art, which could neither pay your rent nor put food on the
table. 13 years later when I returned, my younger brother Obinna, who also
managed my music in Nigeria, relayed Nigerian films everyday just to re-ignite
my interest in them, but I found them too noisy, and their gory voodoo scenes
rather crude. It was a chance meeting
with Fred Amata on a DBN Television program, on which both of us were guests
that finally changed my impression. The handsome, optimistic, ever-cheerful
Benzy, jeans and T-shirt clad keep-fit freak, Fred went to great pains to
graphically explain to me the benefits of returning to the industry, and our
commitment as young African artistes to contribute in the development of a
respectable indigenous black artistic tradition. Eventually I was taken in by
the eloquence of his argument and the charm of his youthful charisma. Within a
short period of time I was on set acting with him, and before long I realized
that there was nothing one could do in the film industry without involving at
least one member of the Amata family, and in the years that followed, my
artistic activities were constantly tied to them. Eventually I found myself
facing the camera, with Fred calling the shots.
I honored
Fred’s invitation to his cosy office that he shares with his wife Agatha in
Surulere. On arrival Agatha welcomed me. I apologized for my inability to be a
guest of Inside Out, pleading a tight artistic program. My attention shifted
focus to her husband whose friendliness had besieged me from that day we were
both guests of DBN Television. I was struck by the unassuming humility he
displayed in spite of the great heights he has attained in the Nigerian film
industry, first as an actor and artistic creative director and now as a
director. He had left his creative footprints on such films as Mortal
Inheritance, Dust to Dust, Jetta Amata’s Fire and Glory, etc, scripted Onome,
Last Believer, and Dust to Dust, which he also directed. Other films produced
under his direction include The Kingmaker, The Prostitute, The Addict, Anini,
Bai Bureh Goes To War (produced by Olu Jacobs, in collaboration with Sierra
Leonean filmmakers), Broken Chord, and Last Believer among several others. He
was also involved in Daybreak, Opa Williams film Sergeant Okoro, Silent Night,
Heart Beat, Nightmare, Black Mamba, Dangerous Desire and a host of others.
‘As a creative
director, usually the scope of what I do involves bringing all the experience I
have as writer, actor, director, script editor to play, usually it’s quite challenging
because a lot of time the director has come with scripts or situations in
scripts that I would say for lack of better expression below par and we have to
re-script it, sometimes on location’. Fred Amata revealed.
Fred Amata has a
hectic schedule, which takes him to Sierra Leone, South Africa, Europe and
America. He started his artistic profession as an actor while he was a student
of the Theater Arts Department of University of Jos, Nigeria. His elder brother
Zak Amata was his lecturer (three other Amatas, Mena, Ruke and Jeta studied
under Zak). After his graduation he joined the National Youth Service Corp at
NTA (Nigerian Television Authority), Lagos, and started acting on the Zeb Ejiro
soap opera Ripples and Checkmate. Other soap operas in which he starred include
Dreams and Legacy. He has had an ideal working relationship with Chico Ejiro
and Opa Williams, which resulted in optimum utilization of his creative
genius. Fred likes to joke that if the
Amata’s had not established a movie dynasty, they would have probably become
sportsmen, as both their father and Zak were very good footballers and
athletes.
In 1957 the
older Amata, a course mate of Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka, wrote and recorded
Freedom, which according to Fred became the first African film, in conjunction
with Moral Rearmament, a charitable organization that he worked for. Freedom
was a stage play adapted for cinema with a cast of Nigerians, Ghanaian and
East Africans, and shot on Eastman Color (Fred let me watch scenes from the classic
celluloid movie). The stage production was presented around the world.
‘You understand
that when other kids were watching John Wayne, I was watching Amata’. He told
me with boyish pride, ‘my father is a theater artiste, a playwright and a film
director; so right from our early days we were all groomed to act. Essentially
I grew up desiring to be an actor, like my father, to compound that, my elder
brother Zak Amata was in the university studying Theater arts. He was already
performing on stage and TV. All my role models were in the family and when I
went to study theater arts in University of Ibadan, Zak was my lecturer’.
So, fired by the spirit of paternal loyalty,
the Amatas decided from the onset to take their family tradition forward. Zak
Amata was at another point his father’s classmate in Ibadan. This situation
came about because the older Amata had given up his undergraduate study to work
for Moral Rearmament, which took him around the world. Twenty years later, he
returned to finish his study and found himself in the same class with his son.
It is on record that both Amatas graduated the same year from the University of
Ibadan. Zak competes with his son Jetta for production prowess. Fred Amata
explains the Amata dynasty. “We actually have three generations of artistes
right now, my father is the leader of the generation, Zak is the leader of the
second generation, and then Jetta, Zak’s son is the pivot of the third
generation”. Jetta Amata has directed (among others) an intellectually critical
version of Ola Rotimi’s The God Are Not to Blame. The situation is reversed for
Zak, just like in a typical Amata film scenario; he competes with his son Jetta
in the film industry for production prowess and hardly beats him!
Fred Amata
believes that there is a hereditary trait in the artistic excellence of
himself, Ruke, Mena, Eloho, Zak, Jeta, Viefe (Jetta and Viefe are Zak’s sons,
and Viefe, is a 17 year-old editor) and all the members of the Amata family.
This trait, in Mr Amata’s view is so potent that it also transferred to their
spouses, like his wife Agatha, who beside being the anchorperson of a popular
Nigerian TV show was the producer of The Addict, (a movie directed by her
husband), with her younger brother Tony Nwokolo outstandingly playing the lead
role. Fred’s efforts are complimented by Agatha’s creative inputs. Her
program Inside Out is one of the few Nigerian television program with a
live audience, in an ambient where most Television stations are full of cheap
discussion shows in which a presenter introduces one or two talkative who
prattle on about one issue or the other. Agatha takes the trouble to organize a
real participating audience, and in every sense of the word she has become the
authentic television heir of the late May Ellen Ezekiel, Nigeria’s Oprah
Winfrey.
Thus the succour
of creativity spilled over to their in-laws, to the extent that even Agatha’s
younger sister has a TV talk show on Nigerian television. The muse-pecked Amata
bloodline also transferred artistry to Fred and Agatha’s two children Oreva and
Stephanie. Oreva has already commenced an acting career, appearing in Fred’s
film The Fire and The Glory; even Stephanie is displaying the Amata flay for
artistic performance, composing songs, singing, posing, modelling and doing TV
commercials. Both Amatalets featured in Tade Ogidan’s Dangerous Twins.
Beside their
inherent artistic creativity, the strength of the Amatas lies in their unity,
informed by love and appreciation for one another. Behind the scene they
collaborate on the drawing board and thoroughly criticize and make inputs in
eachother’s projects before they are released to the public.
By his own
admission, Fred Amata’s acting career has experienced a nosedive since he
concentrated his energy on directing. In the highly stereotyped Nigerian film
industry, producers have become reluctant to cast him in their films, categorizing him strictly as a director, in the same way Lillian Bach was
initially avoided as a model and I was tagged a musician and consequently kept
out of lead roles for many years. Mr Amata’s decision to switch over to
directing was based on his experience as an actor. He realized that since most
Nigerian film directors were theater-trained television veterans, they were
lacking in the proper technical competence for directing moving pictures. He
first volunteered his skill as an assistant director in many home-video
productions, but that did not give him the control and authority required for
effective change, so he opted to become a director in order to have the
‘godlike’ power required to impose a transformation. He also admits that his
choice of directing was influenced by the naira sign, as directors are fewer,
often better paid than actors and hardly ever owed their fees, especially
considering the fact that Fred Amata has evolved into one of the most
sought-after directors in the Nigerian film renaissance, thus replacing the
glamour of fame with the power of authority and cash. In a nutshell Fred’s
family is growing and so are their needs, priority had to change for continuity
and normalcy to prevail. Fred Amata more than anybody else knows that the
earnings of the Nigerian actor may be high, but his job is always dangling on
the precarious precipice of multiple concurrences. A good director has job
security, and Agatha and her children cannot eat fame.
The
actor/director is a staunch advocate of a collaboration between Hollywood and
Nigeria, which he hopes would lead to the exportation of Nigeria films and the
entrance of Nollywood (the Nigerian film industry) into the mainstream world
movie market, as opposed to the voiced intention of some celebrated Nigerian
actors and actresses to emigrate to Hollywood. Amata sees the emigration option
not only as a brain drain, but also as a degeneration of Nigerian stars into
mendicants for Hollywood ‘waka pass’ (extra roles, crowd scene appearances
etc). Mr. Amata’s theory of cooperation is based on his strong belief that
Nollywood which has recorded the highest movie growth rate in human history,
has finally come of age and is sufficiently equipped, both artistically and
intellectually to collaborate with Hollywood. In his opinion the only edge
Hollywood has over Nollywood is finance and technology. He dismisses critical
assertions that the Nigerian tendency towards hasty productions fills the
market with mediocre films, believing instead that the speed and intensity of
work in Nigerian film keep the practitioners continually on their toes, in a
permanent movie workshop where the cast and crew change weekly, and working
perpetually under pressure improves skill, imaginativeness and competence at an
astounding pace. Judging by the quality of what Nigerian actors produce in one
week, under adverse working conditions, if given normal conditions, our hard baked
actors will even outdo their pampered Hollywood counterparts. Nigeria is
technologically equipped for the production of any kind of movie, but the lack
of good sponsors increase the prevalence of low budget movies, which constrains
individual producers to utilizing the technology affordable by their lean
purses, thus giving the general impression that Nigeria lacks modern film
technology.
Fred Amata
visualizes Nigeria leading the world film market. To buttress his point he
remembers that TV producers and entertainment writers dismissed Nigerian films
as substandard and unviable at the onset, but now it has fully taken root as
Nigeria’s highest entertainment output, liberating the nation from Hollywood’s
stranglehold, a feat that even Europe has not been able to attain. The full
exploitation of our movie potentials can only be achieved with the full
participation of the government and the corporate world. So optimistic is Fred
Amata that he predicts these changes within the next three years, under the right
atmosphere.
On the incessant
accusation of the preponderance of cult of personality, the recycling of ‘old
faces’ in Nigerian films, the blunt Mr. Amata professes that these so called
‘old faces’ are actors who have been waiting patiently for their turn, standing
in the seemingly unmoving cue of upward
mobility in the film industry, and should therefore be allowed to benefit from
the fruit of their labour and perseverance. New artistes should learn the
virtue of patience and be willing to pay their dues.
Mr Amata opposes
the syndrome of making two part films for commercial reasons, putting the
unproductive trend squarely on the doorsteps of marketers who want to buy two
films for the price of one, while striving for proper regulating guidelines to
checkmate the short-changing of Nigerian filmmakers by media outfits like DSTV
AfricaMagic, and also check piracy, both locally and internationally, and
ensure that practitioners get royalties for the rising international sale of
Nigerian films.
I suggest that it must be a happy thing to
marry your campus sweetheart. The couple smiles shyly. After their days as students in University of
Jos, they met again at a popular discotheque in Lagos and the fire of love
consumed them just like in the movies, they decided that this time, they were
never going to say goodbye, that love was forever and ever, so they got married
and raised a family.
“I realized that
she was a very special person from the first day I met her”, says Fred. But
Agatha interrupted in feigned anger. “How come you don’t tell me these
beautiful things to my face?” suggesting that love needs constant expression. I
am certain that he shows his affection in more ways than words can say.
“Agatha you’re a
very special person”, Fred said with an affectionate smile.
“Thank you,
you’re special too”. She replied.
Boisterous laughter!
Fred Amata was recently elected President of the Actors Guild of Nigeria. Join me in congratulating him!!
BOB EJIKE
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