
Victor Olaotan recent chat with The Entertainer.
Could you give us an overview of your career?
I got my feet
firm in the industry in 1959 and from then, I knew I would love to be
in this business because growing up, we watched Indian and Chinese
movies and I have always been interested in the industry, although I
never knew what I wanted to be. I thought of being a dancer or a
singer. I also aspired to be a doctor because I was a science student. I
attended St Gregory’s College in Obalende and I am a full.
Lagosian.
I did all kinds of odd jobs just to make ends meet. I started with a
company as a security officer and rose to be the manager of the company
within five years. I managed to be successful in America before moving
to Canada for a while and because the lifestyle was too laid back for
me, I had to go back to the US. I started business and made a lot of
money and I bought a lot of properties. In
2002, I decided to come back to Nigeria’s movie industry because I
heard the industry was making waves. When I came to Nigeria, I was
disappointed to see that a lot of my friends that I left behind were not
really making it and so I decided to start a computer engineering
training school with a cousin of mine and later went to run a petrol
station with a friend. While I was in the business, there came the
audition for Tinsel. Initially, I wasn’t interested in being part of the
production but when I called my friend, Akin Lewis, we both went and
did the audition and three months later, I heard my wife rejoicing on
phone that I had been made the lead character for Tinsel. While on, we
tried to struggle with some issues with the production crew.
What led to your exit from Tinsel?
Towards the end,
I found out that the company was not taking care of us like they
should. We were contractors and we didn’t get any bonuses. I expected
that we should be able to live in big houses and drive in nice cars and
these were our demands. We had deals with bigger companies and they
promised to give us cars and many essential goodies but all that
bottomed-out for Tinsel. I soon found out that these things were not
forthcoming. I demanded what I thought was commensurate for someone
like me to earn but that didn’t work out and that was how I took a walk.
Since you left Tinsel, what has been the biggest project you did?
I can’t say for
real, because I have done a couple of big projects like the one I am at
present doing featuring Olu Jacobs, Desmond Elliot and Rachael Oniga. I
have also done a few here and there.
What do you feel people don’t know about Victor Olaotan?
Well, I started
from the old Ibadan Theatre Group which was the genesis of the acting
industry in Nigeria. Everything that has to do with production and
entertainment started from Ibadan. Notable names include Dapo Adelugba,
Wale Ogunyemi, Tunji Oyeyemi, Jimi Solanke, and the rest. I was
privileged to have been schooled through all these legends and that has
given me the pedigree I have now. With this background, I think whatever
comes before me now will just be like a piece of cake because it was
tougher then than now. Discipline was more pronounced then.
We no longer
have many things and even good government backing is lacking. People
should know that I am someone that was favoured by God to have a strong
pedigree in the industry. I did one of the first television programmes
in Nigerian titled; Candle in the Wind, by Laolu Ogunniyi. I am one of
the few Nigerian actors who have performed on and off Broadway in
America. Even in Hollywood, many aspire to perform on Broadway but
never got it.
Tell us about your love life
I am married and
I have three kids in the marriage but five kids altogether. My first
son is getting married very soon. I am blessed with a beautiful woman
and as for all the temptations in marriage, I have learnt those a long
time ago. I keep away from such temptations because of my Christian
life. I even know some women in the industry who are very disciplined.
They may look loose but when you get to know them, you see that they
don’t mess around. It is notorious for someone well known here to mess
around. I am a brand ambassador to a couple of companies and I have to
be very careful.
A lady walked up
to me at the airport one day and asked to have my number. When I asked
her what for, she said “I want to be one of your girls”. I said I don’t
have girls. The only girls I have are my daughters. We boarded the same
flight and I am sure she found out that she couldn’t catch me like
that. I worked with Tinsel for seven years and I never messed around.
Some of the girls on set could even come and sit on my laps, but I have
never fallen for anyone of them.
How else do people make it in the industry apart from acting?
Thank God for
some companies and organisations that have found branding a way out in
marketing today. There are lots of companies that need faces for their
brands and a lot of brand ambassadors are coming up. I am a brand
ambassador for Clean Ace and they gave me a Range Rover which I drive. I
know a lot of other brand ambassadors of telecommunication companies
and banks. I have also branded for Samsung and some others. Branding is
what augments your income as an actor, because if you look at the pay,
it’s so meagre. It’s your face that matters and that is why I say that
actors should learn to have integrity. If you are a clean act , a lot of
good companies will come your way.
What’s your
opinion of Nollywood, Bollywood and Hollywood? Bollywood is unique but
Hollywood is what we all aspire to. It is because everything starts and
ends there. The last dispensation was good for us as some monies were
earmarked for us even though a lot of us didn’t get access to it.
Nollywood will make its own niche as time goes by.
Which other area
in the industry do you think needs to be explored? We thank God for the
music industry because the guys are doing well and they have big cars
and houses everywhere. The comedians and MCs too are doing very well.
The only areas still not making it well is acting and writing but I
believe that with time, we will get there.
If you were not a thespian, what could you have been?
I probably could
have been an academic. I studied the sciences back then in school and
till date, I still read science books. I, probably could have been a
professor because I was teaching when I was in the US before I
discovered that I love the glamour of acting and I couldn’t have chosen
anything else other than acting.
What if any of your children decides to toe your path?
I will only
advise that they train themselves in the art and that’s what I always
advise others. I started by earning two shillings and then progressed
to N2.50. Today, I make as much as N1.5m. An actress like Mercy Johnson
earns very well and she is a fantastic actress.
What would you like to be remembered for?
I would like to
be remembered as an actor who lived and had so much integrity because
when you die, the only thing that is talked about is your integrity. I
try as much as possible to build and maintain that.
Does it bother you to see that most entertainers are not really honoured, despite their huge achievements?
As far as
national honours are concerned, it is all about packaging. You see
people that are not worth it bagging it; people that I started before
and I have done more significant works than they have done. Imagine
someone like Jimi Solanke who we regard as the best and first thespian
that ever lived yet I don’t think they ever gave him any national
honour. In due time, honours will always come because nobody can stop
another’s destiny.
How do we imbibe the culture of appreciating our own?
I think we have
to go back to the basics. In the US, there is a course known as
Appreciation of Arts where you learn how to appreciate the art of
writing, acting, dancing, painting and sculpture, so that when you come
of age, you become versatile. It’s a course that needs to be taught here
and it will be about the recognition of artistes. An average actor in
the US makes about $10million . I can say that the total budget for all
actors in Nigeria is not even up to that. Some actors in the US make up
to $45million from a movie. I just did a stage play titled; ‘The Butcher
and the Bridge’ and people came to pay as much as N35, 000 and N40,000
just to watch. That is how much they appreciate the arts. Even some
producers want to pay only N100,000 for a full production as if they are
pricing fish. An actor in Nigeria should not be earning less than N10
million for a production, but now they make less than N1 million. It’s
mostly political and not about how good the actor is.
As a producer,
you don’t expect to win all the time. You might spend N20 million on a
movie and you make N200 million. You won’t go to your casts and crew
and give them more money.
What’s the best thing that has happened to you in life?
I think that was
when one of my aunts took me to England when I was a kid. I can never
forget that experience. As an adult, I can say that it was when I made
my first great money in life in the US and that was almost $200,000 . I
threw it in my bed, shut my door and slept on it.
Do you have any
regret in life? I regret I was not born in Hollywood. I know where I
could have been if I were an American actor but I still thank God for
everything. I know before I die, I will make a big mark.
What is the saddest time of your life?
That was when I
came back from the US and I discovered that my mum had died. I still
regret it today, because I didn’t even know how she was buried.
What’s your advice for young people who are aspiring to be like Victor Olaotan?
I am a radical
in the system and I try to be straight forward. I advise that you get
along with almost everybody and have integrity. Also ensure you school
yourself very well. Don’t just jump into it because you like glamour.
[The Entertainer]
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