General News | 22 July 2008 13:02 CET

I charged half-a-penny for a view of my ‘cinema’ - Bukky Ajayi

Veteran actress, Zainab Bukky Ajayi, says she is nearer to 70s than 60s, but she loves what she does for a living with passion. She converted to Islam in the early eighties and chose the name Zainab.

"I love what I am doing and I don't think I can resign or retire from it."

Her love for the theatre started as a young girl when her father used to take her to the cinemas. "I used to tell him that one day I was going to be like one of those actresses.

But unfortunately he never lived to see me become an actress. It's a pity but that's God's will. When I was a very young girl, my interest was so much that I used to do a cardboard sort of cinema for children, and I used to charge them half a penny to come and watch.”

Later, the opportunity came for her to study in England. She was abroad for six years, as a federal government scholar.

She left England and came back to Nigeria after her education in 1965 and started out working with Nigeria Television Authority as a presentation assistant in 1966. "Then we had an extremely good leader in Dr. Christopher Kolade, who was always monitoring what we did.

"Back then, we had this Thursday meetings, which all announcers all over the states must attend, and this kept all of us on our toes. Then it was not a question of being glamorous, because unknowingly, you would be recorded off transmission the night before the meeting. The tape would now be played back on that day whilst we were having the meeting, and the best part was that, a younger person who was just coming in would be asked to criticize you. So, that kept all of us on our toes."

Afterwards, she became a presenter and then a news caster. She presented a couple of children's programmes and 'Nigerian's Sketches', a programme which was all about Nigerian culture, and Diran Ajijedidun of blessed memory was her producer. She was later transferred to Port Harcourt and later back to Lagos, and it was at that time she started her acting career.

She started with the 'Village Headmaster' in the 70's, and she later got a role in Amaka Igwe's 'Checkmate'. She has featured in so many home videos that she has lost count.

Shooting of international film Critical Assignment in South Africa, is one of the events of her life that she will never forget. "It gave me an opportunity to see how it is done elsewhere, other than Nigeria, where a movie is shot in five days. I went round the country. I saw how a star is treated. For once in my life, I was a star. I was treated as a star, and I believe I am a star. I had my own caravan with my name on it, my own car with a driver who doubled as my security man. And on days when I was not working the car was there to take me wherever I wanted to go. I had a lovely time, I enjoyed it and I said to my almighty Allah that Hollywood is the next step."

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