By DOTUN OLUBI
The life of 76-year-old Jimoh Aliu has been about drama, theatre arts
and culture. A mere mention of his name evokes memories of those
glorious days of television drama series that typified the rich Yoruba
culture and tradition, taught morals and entertained his teeming fans.
From Igbo Olodumare to Arelu to Yanpo-Yanrin, his productions were a
must-watch.
In this interview Jimoh Aliu talks about his early life, family,
secrets of his youthfulness and what led to the estrangement between him
and his delectable wife and actress Folake Onisola aka Orisabunmi and
other issues.
Excerpts…
You recently turned 76. At your age, are you still relevant
in theatre arts? Are there roles you can still play?
There are no roles I cannot play, age not withstanding. I dance, I
drum, I sing, I do set design and I still compose and produce plays.
There is no part assigned to me that I cannot adequately play. From
childhood I have always been versatile and can play different roles and
character, even comedy. Technology has brought a lot of enhancements to
the theatre world. In our time, they used to call us Alarinjo (dance as
you walk). We went from town to town on foot.
When we arrived in a town, we would go to the Oba to pay homage and
announce our presence. The Oba would call the chiefs and direct the town
crier to go around and inform the community of our presence and
mission. We would paste pictures of our previous plays on cardboards and
hang on the neck like a kitchen apron for visibility, both front and
back. And how much were we paid then? Six pence and at times, one
shilling!
If held back by rain or if our show for the day did not yield income,
we would be at the mercy of the Oba who then took up our feeding. Most
times we resorted to begging his subjects for garri and other foodstuffs
to survive.
Those in theatre today didn’t pass through what we went through. They
are the beneficiaries of our sufferings.
Considering theatre arts and drama of your era and now, which
is more prominent and well embraced?
The two seem to have bonded together. So they seem to be at par. In
our time, there was no technological enhancement. There was nothing like
doing effects on camera and other stuffs we have these days. Take for
an instance, I was producing Igbo Olodumare all the stunts did then were
real. No faking. Whatever we desired to happen, we simply conjured and
it happened. Assuming we desired a role for a snake, antelope or any
other animal, would conjure the animal to appear. Then it was raw charms
just the way our grandfathers use to do it!
But these days, computer technology has made it possible to create
such scenes and make it look as if you truly have those animals in the
cast. It’s the recognition of acting in my era, as primitive as it was,
that sustained my relevance in the society today.
I’m always amazed wherever I go all over the world and people greet
me or ask if I was the famous Aworo or Jimoh Aliu they watched on the
screen, be it in London, America, Italy, Belgium, Holland and even Saudi
Arabia. I’m always accosted on the streets.
Some will say they were then in primary school; some in secondary
school and others in the university. Some others will even mention when I
was in the army. Yes! I was in the 3rd Marine Commando of the Nigerian
army for seven and half years.
My contemporaries then became brigadiers and generals. others who we
used to play for then in the schools and universities have become
judges, lawyers and some are now traditional rulers.
That’s why anywhere I go today, I’m received with honour and dignity
because all these people know what I stand for and from where I was
coming. I don’t drink or smoke; I am not addicted to kolanuts and
neither do I womanize. I have never been treated with scorn or in shabby
manner, anywhere I go.
Plays of the two eras are good and commendable, but we wrote
fantastic scripts that are incomparable with what you have now. If you
sit to watch today’s plays, five minutes is enough for one to predict
the likely end. Plays of today most times lack suspense and originality.
There were plays we did over 30 to 40 years ago that some of these
youngsters turn around to make them seem recent. Some even plagiarize
famous Indian films out of lack of creativity. They don’t research much!
Recently, I was watching a play and was amused at seeing one of my
old productions being shamefully cloned.
You just said that you neither drink, smoke nor womanize and it is
said that no affluent man can avoid these three vices. Yet you have
several wives, how come?
In theatre arts in those days, we married multiple wives to stabilize
our troupes. Take for instance during the time of Fadeyi Oloro, we may
decide to make Orisabunmi who might be the real wife the stage wife. And
if someday decided to pull out and form another group, the famous
Orisabunmi role would be technically dead.
So since no dramatist worth his onions wanted to lose fans and in
effect popularity, we conceived the idea of conscripting our wives into
some roles or marrying those we felt were assets and indispensable.
Also, some others were needed at home to guide the children in terms
of their education and moral upbringing because of the itinerant nature
of our profession, which made it impossible for the breadwinners to
adequately monitor their upbringing on a daily basis. But now, I have
just three wives. Those who could not understand me have left – either
they were arrogant, not submissive or honest.
You said earlier that you were once in the army. You once
learned bricklaying and had your hands in some other things. If you had
not been a dramatist, which other profession do you think you could have
embraced?
If I had not been a dramatist, I could have been engaged in the
profession of my forebears – I would have become a babalawo (diviner or
native priest). That was the professional calling of my grandfather. And
that is what I am fully engaged in now.
It was foretold long ago that I would end up practicing the
profession of my forebears at old age. Each time I heard such, I was
furious and I protested, asking why it must be me. Having traveled far
and wide, I could not imagine myself coming back to practice as a native
doctor. Over the years, Islamic clerics and pastors continually
prophesied the same future for me.
But I noticed that if people came to visit me and complained of one
affliction or another and I would ask them to pluck this or that leaf
and use in so and so way; they would get cured and come back to give
testimony.
These were things I learned from my father, but I thought they were
inconsequential; that’s why I was nonchalant about what I knew. So when
they came back to thank me, they would ask me what they should pay. They
were always amazed when I said they should pay nothing. These people
usually confessed that they gone to several places and spent enormous
amounts of money with getting solution.
They encouraged me to consider going into it full time. Even without
advertising, I cannot cope with the number of people who throng here in
search of solution.
You were privy to my discussions with the lady that just left with
her husband and mother. She came all the way from England. I have just
dispensed with one that left three days ago; she stayed for a whole
week! Just before you came I received a call intimating me of yet
another person that just landed at the airport and was on the way here
from Lagos.
The growing interest is why I am renovating and upgrading my
building to accommodate my clients who spend a lot on hotel bills just
to see me in Ado Ekiti. I am upgrading the place to save them money
while giving them comfort. How can I cope with the score of patrons if I
advertise? Can you imagine the scenario if I advertise?
There’s danger in having a multitude to attend to
when one cannot satisfy them. As some are complaining of their
discomfort, others have lack of decent meal to contend with. To some
others still, where to put up would be their headache.
So, it’s not good for you to advertise and have so many to attend to
and yet cannot adequately cater for their needs and give them prompt
attention. You cannot fully imagine their inconveniences; especially if
they came from a far place. To my mind, not catering adequately for them
is in itself a sin against their souls. What I do that amazes most
people is that I have different people to cater for their different
needs: some responsible for entertaining them; some to take care of
their accommodation and feeding. I even have a chauffeur to drive them
around if they so desire for the number of days they have to stay.
My wives often query my rationale for all these, wondering how much I
was paid. I tell it should not all be about money.
In some instances I have had cause to be invited on locations and in
such cases, the money I spent was usually far more than the amount I was
paid because most times, one meets struggling acts who look up to you
to augment the pittance they earn there. In some cases you encounter
fans and uninvited enthusiasts who you cannot just ignore given one’s
status as a star, a role model or a father figure. In other words, the
prophecy came to pass as my hen eventually came home to roost.
At 76 what can we attribute your youthfulness and wellbeing to? Many
at your age are either down with stroke, have eye defects, suffer memory
loss or are frail.
I have nothing special to attribute this to other than God’s grace.
My father lived up to be 135 years. He was neither blind, crippled nor
encountered any defects. On the day he departed this world, he had gone
to Eid (Islam’s greater festival) and after arriving home, he
superintended the slaughtering of his obligatory ram; went to bed and
that was it!
We used to run after him as he walked along, because we could not
match his pace. That should tell you how strong and agile he was until
death.
As for me, I do not know why God has been this gracious to me. That’s
why you find me giving gratitude and praising Allah for hours everyday.
I cannot thank Him enough. I engage in other routines I feel can
prolong one’s life. For instance I jog in the morning after praying. I
love eating bitter and natural things. I request for squeezed bitter
leaf solution and effirin, which I drink regularly. I sometimes prefer
to have my palm oil extracted direct and sieved from the kernel for my
soup. I also love taking our local herbs (Agbo) but not paraga. I also
take fresh vegetables. And rest very well when I feel like.
Do you know that sometimes I drive all the way from Ado Ekiti to
Abuja? People were amazed and some reprimanded me to desist from it.
But I regard long distance driving as exercise my body needs.
Talking about longevity and my achievements, I also believe I was
specially anointed by the Creator because my mother had been in a
previous marriage for 17 years without a child before having me. And as
expected of the son of a babalawo, lots of herbs and concoctions taken
by my mother to fortify me in the womb were found in my palms when I
came forth. It was then collected and added to other items, gathered
into an Ape (earthen ware) as bath herb (Agbo) for my first bath.
Do you know I rely on the bible and Qu’ran in my practice? How I do
these remain a mystery to even me. Perhaps it is as a result of my
affiliation with pastors and alfas. Aside these, I have traveled wide in
search of knowledge and I’m a very curious person by nature.
I have been to virtually all the countries in Europe, America, West
Africa, Cuba and even Saudi Arabia where I was made the patron of the
Yoruba community and awarded a certificate. There, I do not sit under
tents whenever I visit the holy land. I always move around all through
my stay. I visited the ancestral home of Prophet Mohammed (SAW), where I
was presented with a unique Qu’ran that is still with me till today. I
just arrived from a pilgrimage recently.
Now let us touch on the issue of your estranged wife and actress,
Folake Onisola, aka Orisabunmi. There are various accounts on how she
left you for someone else. It was rumored at a time that she left you
for King Sunny Ade. How far is this true?
First let tell you that God brought us together in a very miraculous
way. Whatever one desires to embark upon in life, the person should put
God first. If one is not close to God, there is nothing that the devil
cannot do. When we first met, prophets, alfas and even traditionalists
bombarded us with lots of prophetic warnings not to fight or separate.
We got such messages regularly. We tried to heed the warnings. But when
the devil struck, the agent that satan used to accomplish the mission
was the man she eloped with. I won’t mention his names. Funny enough,
this man came to seek my intervention when, as he claimed, that
omo-oniles had taken his land at Egbeda, Lagos. He was the Judas used to
snatch her from me.
The omo-oniles chased him out of the land with cutlasses and cudgels.
He came crying to me! He probably must have heard of my closeness to
all Aworis, especially in the whole of Alimosho. They love and adore me
so much in Egbe, Egbeda, Isheri, Ikotun and so on. I am very close to
all their Obas. And that love and affection was the reason they gave me a
piece of land to build my house in Egbeda house. And all these Obas had
gotten acquainted with me for long. Majority of them had not mounted
the throne then. I came to Lagos in 1946 and had been engaged in this
profession since 1969.
Now going back to Orisabunmi, when I met her and the relationship
began, she was so naïve and innocent. In fact, she had never been to
Lagos. I brought her to Lagos for the first time! When we met, I noticed
she was a child of light, destined for greatness. I did not fail to
tell her so, and I promised to make her a star. And the Lord was on our
side.
I was able to groom her and brought out the best of her talents. I
took her around the world. We travelled far and wide within the country
and to other African countries including Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana, Togo and
Benin Republic. We also visited England, Italy, Belgium and Germany. We
even went to America.
Back to the man: I went with him to the land and as soon as the boys
saw me, they began hailing me, saying, Baba Aworo! Baba Aworo! Upon
seeing him with me, they protested saying, ‘This is the man that wants
to take our land.’ I countered by educating them that I have several
wives and that I bought the land for Orisabunmi and only asked the young
man to represent me there so the land would not be taken from her.
They capitulated immediately! I asked him if he could raise some
amount so that work could commence right there on the site in my
presence. He did so and work began there that same day. Blocks and other
materials were brought. In fact I ordered the boys to act as the
custodians of the plot, and so it was till the house was completed.
All the while, as the construction was going on, he had been
clandestinely scheming his plot. You know I had presented Orisabunmi to
them as the one I bought the plot for, so her usual presence there
couldn’t be queried or suspected. By the time the building was completed
I was in London. He moved into the house with her. Yes! The house built
on the land I fought tooth and nail to ensure he did not lose. They
began living there together as husband and wife!
What should I have done in such a situation? You can see that was a
big trial from God – a great tribulation. All manner of people came to
me in protest that I should fight back. But I adamantly refused to do
so. I kept telling them I would not be a party to destroying the house I
built. Orisabunmi is the house I built.
There was even a time a certain man was attacked and smeared her on
the pages of newspapers. I frowned at it and protested because
Orisabunmi is an institution. She should not be disparaged or maligned.
In the end, she and the man broke up.
As it stands today, we greet one another wherever we meet. And
whenever she was interviewed, she never failed to give me credit as the
one who discovered, groomed and brought her to prominence. In her time,
no one knew I had other wives.
All said, what is good needs prayer and what is not good also needs
prayer. I pity Folake. I truly sympathize with her. Only God can judge
the man that squeezed the bitter juice into our sweet relationship and
turned it sour. It’s only Him that can judge the man that took her from
me.
The Lord says ‘He always will stand by the just and upright’. You
see, that man had drawn the grasscutter’s tail, eehn…! The Lord also is
drawing his too. And he who shoots an arrow onto the sky taking refuge
under the mortar, if the earthly king does not see him, the heavenly one
does. He was not there when we were building that name! Ask me where he
is today? The Creator never sleeps.
In all, I pray God Almighty to continue to protect and shield her. It
had been destined that there will not be children between us, and I
know it is the same devil at work. As for me, she is still in my heart
and I do not leave her out of my prayers. My glory and pride is that she
left my home with an enviable and glorious name and she had been
carrying that with her wherever she goes. She is progressing and I am
progressing.
I still call onto the Lord who in His mercies provided a child for
Hannah. No matter how long, He will provide for her. But she should move
closer to the Lord. She should be mindful of the fact that she is like
the peacock in the world of birds. That is a proverb and the word of
elders.
What about the rumor linking her with King Sunny Ade?
Don’t you know how long my relationship with KSA has lasted? Was
Folake born when Sunny and I met? KSA calls me wherever he has a concert
and wants me to attend. Even when he is celebrating, he never hesitates
to invite me.
When his mother (Mama Pupa) died in Ondo, all of us were there. That
should tell you how close we are. Look at the portrait over there
(pointing). That’s a picture of both of us.
As for the rumoured affair with him, there is no iota of truth in
that. It’s being spread to cause disaffection and confusion. Orisabunmi
and myself met with him (KSA) severally. That was another of the devil’s
ploy that I talked about earlier. There is nothing to stretch on that.
It’s no issue, so let’s forget it!
Finally sir, how would you like to be remembered?
All the things I want the world to know and identify me with are
those things that I had been doing and the proof of this has been my
acceptance wherever I go. How else would I want to be remembered? I have
lived to see how well I would be remembered while alive. See yourself,
all these awards on the wall, I did not buy them. They show that people
recognize my contributions.
That’s the reason why I’m calling on whoever or whichever
organization is willing to give me awards to do so while I’m still alive
o, so I can hang it with those you see there. No award will serve any
purpose to me when I’m dead. It’s rare to find in the whole of this
Nigeria someone as prominent and famous as I am. I’ve not been arrested
for this and that offence in Lagos today, tomorrow in Ibadan, day after
in London or America. Such had never been recorded about me. So I thank
God for the legacy I’m going to leave behind. Nothing can speak more for
me. When the time comes and I go the way of all flesh, journalists,
scholars and tourists will come and see for themselves via these
laurels. That aside, they will be astounded to hear stories hitherto
unheard from my wives and children.
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