How True is their Posing? Does the
popularity and quantity of films by most actors translate into material wealth?
When an actor, who has enjoyed years of
stardom, comes out to say he is broke. Some actors either fade out of the
limelight because the roles are no longer coming in, walk away from Nollywood
on their own terms because the pay is no longer satisfactory, or even die because they couldn't afford the basic needs of life.
The poor state of their finances isn’t public knowledge
until they are ailing and are in need of public financial aid from their fans,
colleagues and the Actors’ Guild of Nigeria (AGN). Because of the decline in
actors' fee, several Nigerian actors have relocated, and even more, are
considering it.
Earlier this year, Femi Ogedengbe, who was once a
'successful' actor in the Yoruba movie industry, currently makes more money as a security guard in the
US than he did as an actor in Nigeria.
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Femi Ogedengbe |
make-believe world. "That’s why many who jump in get frustrated because they missed the memo: it's a huge labour of love," he wrote on Instagram.
For his role in "The Wedding Party," the highest grossing Nollywood
movie ever, Ali Baba who is one of the most successful comedians in
Nigeria, said he charged for a month on set what he charges in four hours as a
comedian.
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Ali Baba |
In 2017, Stanley Aguzie, an actor and producer who has
appeared in series such as "Tinsel,"landed a role in the hit foreign TV series,
"Vikings" and "Into the Badlands" after
he moved to Ireland.
While he was still working in Nigeria, the highest pay he
received was N200,000 for a TV series that required him to work on set for
three months. But as an actor in Ireland, it's a different story for Aguzie,
who made millions of Naira for featuring in one movie.
"I made over Five Million Naira from one film. Not as a
lead actor, but just as a professional actor," he told Pulse.
How lucrative is the acting business in the Nigerian?
How much do actors really make in Nigeria?
Very few actors can still command the kind of deal that was
more prevalent over a decade ago. Genevieve Nnaji, for instance, will
still receive over a million naira for appearing in a Nollywood film, according
to a source who spoke with Pulse. However, there are not so many producers who
can afford big stars like her.
In 2014, Obi Emelonye was quoted to have said that
Nnaji and Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde, two A-List
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Omotola Jalade |
He advised them to fund and star in their own productions.
And in 2016, Nnaji, five years after her last lead role in the 2011 "Tango
with Me," produced and starred in the film, "Road to
Yesterday." And in 2017, she made her directorial debut with the
anticipated star-studded comedy-drama, "Lion Heart."
Currently, most B-List actors are paid less than N400,000
per movie, and even in some cases, N200,000 per movie, a Nollywood insider
tells Pulse. What they do is try to make four or five films in a month to be
able to make up to N2 million. Or, they are offered N2 million to star in, at
least, four films.
"There are producers paying people 50 and 100 thousand
naira, which is unbelievable. But you see, those people don't care, they just
want to appear in a film. A lot of the girls then get boyfriends they can
collect money from, and next thing, they are producing their own film. That's
why you see a lot of people, out of the blues, are producing their own
film," the insider said.
Why is there a decline in actors' fees?
There are several factors that could have caused this
decline, and the recession that hit Nigeria in 2016, forcing several companies
to either fold, lay off staff, cut cost or take a pay cut, probably added more
misery to an already bad situation.
In November 2016, the Managing Director, MultiChoice
Nigeria, John Ugbe, told ThisDay Business that the entertainment
company was facing tough times.
They couldn’t increase subscription rates after the
devaluation of naira, despite the fact that they bought a lot of international
content in dollars. However, to keep offering those content, they absorbed
costs on behalf of their subscribers.
For a while, the entertainment company wasn't able to pay
their bills and was supported by MultiChoice Africa.
It has been years, but quite a number of industries,
individuals, businesses and investors are yet to recover from the infamous 2016
recession.
In 2016, Saidi Balogun told Encomium Magazine that
the decline in earnings is because Nollywood is no longer what it used to be
and most actors can no longer charge professionally. The actors just settle for
whatever the producers are willing to offer, he said.
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Yemi Solade |
Yemi Solade, a veteran and well-known actor in the
Yoruba film industry said that when actors demand a certain amount from a producer, they
drop them and go for their untrained friends.
Going for their "untrained friends" is why there's
a pay gap between both the English-speaking actors and the indigenous film
industry, Kabat Esosa, a Yoruba filmmaker, tells Pulse, reiterating Solade’s
point.
According to Esosa, while the English speaking sector
handles acting as a business, the Yoruba industry still operates the "helping
one another" model, hiring ‘actors’ based on personal relationships.
While actors in both sectors don't make as much money as
they would love, it is worse in the Yoruba film industry. According to a source
who asked not to be named for this story, most Yoruba actors collect as low as
N50,000 for lead roles. "Some will owe you when you finish
filming," he says.
Speaking to Pulse, Jim Iyke said Nollywood is still at the
mercy of so many people who don't care about the industry.
"We are at the mercy of DSTV, we are at the mercy of
theatre owners, we are at the mercy of the guys in the East," he
says.play
Nollywood walks against piracy
(Instagram)
'The guys in the East'
'The guys in the East,' is a frequently used label for
pirates in Nollywood. Piracy has been blamed for the extinction of the VCD/DVD
market, which is arguably the biggest film market in Nigeria.
In 2014, few weeks after the release of "Half of a
Yellow Sun," a big screen adaptation of the award-winning novel
by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, the movie, which was financed with a
US$8 million loan from the Bank of Industry in Nigeria, was sold on the streets
of Lagos for just N500.
In 2015, it was divulged to Kunle Afolayan, that his
film "October 1" would be pirated. Days after he was
notified, the movie was already being sold on the streets of Lagos for N500.
In February 2017, "The Wedding Party," which
was then the highest grossing Nollywood film, was pirated and sold for N500.
Before its release on the streets, an HD version of the movie with the TIFF
watermark was illegally uploaded on YouTube.
While there were reports that the movie - a collaboration
between EbonyLife Films, FilmOne Distribution, Koga Studios and Inkblot
Productions - lost N200 million to piracy, the producers described the movie as a great success.
"The Wedding Party" movie has broken all records
as the highest grossing movie in Nigeria cinema even with the recession and
despite the piracy, it has been a great success," Koga Studios told
Pulse in 2017.
Over the years, other movies and series including "Maami,"
"30 Days in Atlanta" and "Jenifa's Diary" have
been pirated, costing filmmakers millions of Naira.
DSTV
In 2016, Emeka Ike said he quit acting because he
got tired of making money for DSTV without getting royalties.
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Emeka Ike |
"They pay all other countries but when it comes to us,
they say we don’t deserve to be paid. They keep lying that we are just 10
million people who subscribed to DSTV, but I know we are more than that. If you
multiply N10,000 by 10 million, that is N100 billion every month,"
he told The Point in June 2016.
In Hollywood, roles in successful shows and movies don’t
only mean instant huge paychecks for the actors, but also a gift that keeps on
giving. Whenever their works are redistributed, released on DVD or purchased by
a streaming service, these actors get residual checks, also known as royalties.
In 2016, Drake received a $8.25 check for his role
in “Degrassi” over a decade ago. According to a 2016 report by Daily
Mail, Charlie Sheen who was fired from his role in “Two and a
Half Men” in 2011, makes $613,000 each month from residual payments.
Osas Ajibade told Pulse in 2017 that she still receives
residual payments for her roles in American shows -"Meet the Brown" and "Conviction." The
actress, who starred in the Africa Magic hit TV series, "Tinsel,"
hopes royalties would one day become a thing in Nigeria.
AMVCA nominee, Greg OJ, who is known for his roles
in “The Encounter” and “Tinsel,”believes things are getting
better in Nollywood. But he still hopes to be active in the industry when
featuring in just one or two films would not only rake in huge paychecks but
also get him royalties.
While MultiChoice refused to comment on the nature of its
business dealings and engagements with stakeholders in the Nigerian film and TV
industry, a source, who works with the company, told Pulse that no two
commissioned works are the same, and as such, contracts differ, depending on
the deal being negotiated.
The G-8 Ban and its impact on Nollywood
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Ramsey Nouah |
In 2004, eight A-List Nollywood actors, including Ramsey
Nouah, Jim Iyke, Genevieve Nnaji, Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde and RMD, were banned by marketers for charging huge fees. Recalling
the 2004 controversial ban, a source tells Pulse that, the industry never
really recovered from that incident.
Back in those days, most Nollywood actors preferred market
distributors to independent producers.
"They felt shooting with the marketers guaranteed them
steady jobs compared to independents like us, who they felt added no value to
their career," Charles Novia wrote in his book "Nollywood
till November: Memoirs of a Nollywood Insider."
The marketers who had their account numbers would pay
millions into their accounts, even before negotiations. The richer marketers
could afford to pay the A-List actors, while the others couldn't.
As a result of this, most actors had a backlog of
productions to deliver on. Their unavailability despite collecting huge fees,
infuriated the marketers, so a meeting was held, and the decision to ban them
from acting for a year was made.
“They were making what you would call good money back then
because you were looking at about four million per month,” a source tells
Pulse.
Things got worse after the ban. The A-list actors who were
once paid N1 million per film were now paid N400,000. And those who weren't
A-List actors were making about N100,000 per film.
“The gap is still felt till tomorrow, they have not been
able to fill it, I dare say. And it has brought a general decline in the
prosperity of Nollywood,” Jim Iyke tells Pulse, repeating the source's view.
Ramsey Nouah tells Pulse that after the ban, most
actors left the DVD market for the cinema.
“We started making movies for the cinemas since the DVD
market was beginning to think that they owned it [all] and could decide to turn
someone's life around," Nouah said.
"We just delved into it [cinema business] and as you
can see, an alternative market. Now the DVD market is almost dead and gone.
There's so much piracy going on there. It's not a regulated market so even if
you make your big movies and you want to take it to DVD, it's selling little or
nothing."
But, to quite a number of filmmakers, the DVD/VCD was
Nollywood’s biggest market, which is yet to be replaced. “The economic
driver of Nollywood profits,” Jason Njoku, the founder of the
streaming platform, IrokoTV, called it.
“Nothing is there to replace it. Yet. Cinema won't. Internet
TV won't. YouTube won't. Advertisers most definitely won't,” Njoku
recently said on Twitter while talking about Nollywood’s financial problems.
According to Njoku, most cinema movies and their investors
are ‘nursing massive losses.’ In 2015, his company lost $120,000 - an
approximate of N23 million at the time - on a cinema movie, “Never Again.”
Nigerian's love the noise.Follow the signal. Tune out the
noise. This is less sexy than glamours premieres and everyone talking about
your movie. Most of these cinema movies you reference have their investors
nursing massive losses. Like 100%. Real talk, I know the numbers
The only reason this isn't widely known is Nollywood
primarily attracts vanity investors. There I said it, in 2015 @irokotv lost $120k on a cinema movie
Never again. Every ROK produced movie has been profitable since. 100% hit rate.
No glitz, no glamour. Just sauce. Hot sauce.
There still remains a problem in distribution investment for
Nollywood. Everything is inadequate. Anyone who tells you otherwise is lying.
VCD/Video club which was the old economic driver of Nollywood profits died in
2013. I wrote about it 5 years ago.
Nothing is there to replace it. Yet. Cinema won't. Internet
TV won't. YouTube won't. Advertisers most definitely won't. Scratch beneath the
surface there is an apocalypse happening in Nollywood for hundreds of producers
who can't produce anymore. Thats the truth. Apocalypse.
ow then do most actors fund an expensive lifestyle?
Most actors don't make money off their acting jobs. So how
do they afford to live it up in expensive apartments and drive expensive cars?
There is the pressure they face from their fans, who expect
them to be as rich as they appear on the screen. They have to make ends meet to
meet up to the status they are trying to build as actors and superstars.
"Everyone sees them [actors] on TV and think they
should be rich or put up the appearance of a superstar. So they have to live up
to it, and then they do and bite more than they can chew,"Ramsey Nouah
tells Pulse while talking about what he misses about Nollywood of the 90s.
Ramsey Nouah during an interview at Pulse (Pulse)
Aremu Afolayan, an actor and brother to Kunle and Gabriel
Afolayan, told Punch Newspaper in June 2018 that people tend to think he is the richest Yoruba actor because
of the way he lives.
"But that is a lie. Nigerians assume a lot. I live in a
rented apartment because I cannot afford to build one. When they see me buy a
new car, they don’t know if I paid for the car in instalments; instead, they
call me a big boy. What type of big boy lives on N50,000 or N100,000 income per
film as an actor?" he says.
According to Afolayan, most actors and producers are
connected to influential people in the country, who give them contracts, while
some others have side businesses.
Stephanie Otobo
In 2017, Stephanie Otobo alleged that Nigerian
pastor Apostle Suleman had bought a Mercedes-Benz 450 GL worth
$76,000 for Nollywood actress, Daniella Okeke.
Defending Suleman, Nollywood actress Georgina Onuoha described
him as a kind man, who has helped several Nollywood actors, including Leo
Mezie, who suffered kidney failure in 2016. Suleman reportedly gave the ailing
actor eight million naira for his treatment.
"He is known for blessing actors with cars and starting
businesses for them. He is a friend to a majority of us, including me. Majority
of Nollywood players travel to his events home and abroad," Onuoha
wrote on her Instagram page in 2017.
Jim Iyke, who is no longer as frequent as he used to be on
TV screens, told The Net NG during an interview in June 2018, that
most producers can no longer afford him.
But he has been busy, creating opportunities and jobs for
Nigerian Youths via his several business ventures which includes ‘Oga
Work,’ a new App that makes it easy to find quality service providers and
job recruiters.
He told Pulse that after his ban in 2004, he started to look
for other opportunities, do
things that he didn't think was conceivable, meet people that he
didn't know wanted to do business with him and travel the world.
Quite a number of Nollywood actors make extra money from
being ambassadors to big brands, while some others own businesses that bring in
cash. Very few depend on just their acting fee for survival.
How can this decline be fixed?
Earlier this year, John Okafor told Vanguard that
the Nigerian film industry would surpass the oil industry financially if a
structure is set up.
In an Instagram post in July, Vimbai Mutinhiri also
attributed low earnings to the absence of structures and unions in the
industry.
One of the most popular unions in Nollywood is the Actors
Guild of Nigeria, currently headed by Emeka Rollas. The guild, which has been in the news more for its political activities and
drama than issues affecting the industry, has repeatedly come under
attack for ignoring its members.
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Ernest Asuzu |
Recently, Ernest Asuzu, an actor who, during his
active years, starred in several popular films, called the union out for abandoning him to face a severe
illness alone.
If Asuzu's filmography is anything to go by, he should, at
least, be comfortable enough to cater for his own medical needs. But that's not
the case with most 'popular' Nollywood actors.
"There is a medical scheme available for any actor that
is a member of the Actors Guild of Nigeria. That, I think is applaudable," Judith Audu told Pulse in 2015.
However, a filmmaker who refused to be named for this story
doesn't think that's enough. Unions like AGN fail the actors, not by
'abandoning them during their sick days,' but by failing to represent their
interests during their active years," the filmmaker said.