Popular Nollywood actor, Victor Osuagwu, who is the new Lagos branch
chair of the Actors Guild of Nigeria, opens up in a recent interview
about his life, acting career, his wife and many other things.
Victor
said he was born with neither a silver spoon nor a wooden spoon but
rather a divine spoon. Born and bred in Port Harcourt, he said he shares
blood relations with Rivers State as his mother is from Opobo.
“When
I say I was born with a divine spoon, it means that I have a special
talent, instilled by God after creating me, and that is the talent I’m
using today for entertainment,” he said.
He met his wife at
University of Port Harcourt when she was still a young girl of 17 years
and he told her straight she was going to be his wife. They courted for a
long time before they finally got married.
Describing his first
experience on stage, he said it was awesome while adding that he had
never had an embarrassing day on stage.
When asked his most
memorable day as an actor, he said, “Every role given to you as an
artiste, you must see it as challenging. There is no role that you
consider bigger or smaller, because all it entails is for you to
interpret those roles; it is not your character; it has nothing to do
with your identity; you are playing somebody’s character. So, obviously,
they are all challenging. But, then, there is one particular
challenging role I did, and when I read the script, I was happy to be
part of it; I didn’t go for the money, but the name I was about to make
out of it – that was in One Dollar. Then, I was 30-something years old,
and I was meant to play a 70-something-year-old man.
“You could
imagine at that age I was getting married to somebody like Patience
Ozokwor. So, you were meant to transform your character from your
youthful age to that of an elderly man the script is talking about, not
just his age, but his attitude and everything. When I got that role, I
asked myself, “How am I going to do this?” I worked with my makeup
artiste and we suggested ways we could achieve a better interpretation
of that role, so we came up with ideas, like having baldhead, wrinkles
and grey hairs. When I looked myself in the mirror afterwards, I was
sure I wasn‘t the Victor that I know (laughs), and I played that role
well.”
On how he handles stardom, he said he considers his
relationship with his fans and the public outside there adding that
managing oneself is not easy, because sometimes the stardom gets into
your head.
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