Oge Okoye-Duru is undoubtedly a success story in the Nigerian movie industry. The mother of two speaks on a number of issues bordering on her life and the movie industry in general. Excerpts:
With some Nollywood practitioners taking up roles that will expose their bodies, can Oge Okoye find herself in this situation?
Never! No amount of money is worth your moral value. I am a mother
and a mentor to some people, the emerging generation; I can’t take up a
role that will involve nudity because of these people that look up to me
and because of our society. But I could do other sensual roles, but for
nudity, I wouldn’t even dare it.
How does your husband feel for those sensual or romantic roles you play?
I really don’t know if he feels bad, but I know that being a human
being like I am, he might be feeling bad inside but he is not showing
it. Funny enough, he has never complained about them. He encourages me a
lot; he is always there for me. It’s not much of a problem though; he
doesn’t watch my movies, unless maybe you see him hiding somewhere
watching it.
How do you cope with the distance between you two?
We understand each other; we love each other; we know when to draw
the line. We are like brother and sister. It’s all about the
relationship; it’s all about communication. He calls me almost 10 times
in a day. Every night, I must talk to him before I sleep; it’s a must.
It’s not much of a problem. I’m always there, and if I’m not there, he
is here. In fact, he just left for his base not quite three weeks now.
What is his name and how did you meet him?
His name is my husband. Anyway, he’s Stanley Duru. It was really not
love at first sight with my husband. We were friends at first and it was
going on like that then the marriage came. I got married in 2005. I met
him early 2004. Marriage has made me more mature in life. I am so
matured that sometimes when I am having a discussion with my very close
cousin who is like my sister, she would tell me that I’m talking like an
old woman.
How many kids do you have?
I have two lovely kids. My boy is five years old, and my second a
girl, will be three soon. It’s really hard, but it takes a whole lot of
hard work and a lot of sincerity for a marriage to survive. There are
some questions people will ask you about your relationship and you
wouldn’t even know what to say and you wouldn’t want to lie. You are
just like caught in the middle. One thing I just don’t do is to allow
any part of me to suffer – my job, my career, my family. I try to fix a
balance.
But there are rumours that your marriage has crumbled?
It is totally false, I really don’t know why people would be breaking
up our marriage and bringing it back for us on their own. I really
can’t get it. My husband and I are still very much together and we are
going to be forever.
Nigerian tribune
No comments:
Post a Comment