Adunni Adewale |
The
lady behind Date Gone Bad, a new comedy skit making waves online Adunni
Adewale open up to PUNCH.
The
Nollywood actress Adunni Adewale (aka Adunni Ade), starts the New Year on a
bright note. Her video skit, Date Gone Bad, came to limelight on Youtube
website about 10 days ago, has attracted so much attention that it has recorded
over 100,000 hits.
The
able actress entrenched herself in aiming at the Nigeria’s star-studded movie
industry. The two-cast skit, featuring actor and producer Joseph Jayeoba and
Adunni herself, was directed by Lagos-based Sanjo Adegoke, who has been
involved in several other related projects.
In the comic film, the guy makes a deadly mistake on sighting a lady of Adunni’s complexion. The colour of her skin portrays her as a white folk, who cannot understand Wa n pa o – the term Yorubas use in describing anyone who does not understand a single word of the Yoruba Language.
But
Adunni is Yoruba-born of a Nigerian father and an American mother. This is the
intrigue she plays upon in Date Gone Bad. The guy in the skit is an
opportunist who wants to lure her to bed – and, indeed, rape her.
He
invites her for a date. In the course of their conversation in English, the
goon makes a phone call in which he boasts – in Yoruba - to a friend that
his trap has just caught an oyinbo girl. He swears that he is going
to unleash his manhood on her as soon as they leave the restaurant where they
are meeting.
Unfortunately
for him, Adunni understands everything he has said. After a slight suspense, she
thus gets enraged and launches a Yoruba verbal war on the predator. The
surprise here is bound to beat any viewer’s imagination and make them laugh
profusely.
“I
must say I am shocked at the kind of attention the skit has got,” she tells our
correspondent in an interview. “I knew it would be good, but I did not imagine
it would get up to this level.”
The
success of the production, which Adegoke, otherwise called SOJ, also describes
as exciting, has spurred Adewale on to do more in the sub-genres. Adegoke is
also a music producer.
Adunni
first attracted attention when she featured in Saidi Balogun’s movie, You or
I, Fred Idika’s Behind the Cloud (a TV series), Dereck Obasi’s Babatunde
Diaries and a new film by Desmond Elliot – Rosemary Roses.
Besides, the graduate of Accounting from the University of Kentucky, USA, also
featured in Sound Sultan’s music video, Kokose, while she did same for
Ice Prince last September.
Born
in New York, USA, she grew up in Lagos where she attended Chrisland Schools and
The Bells Secondary School, Ota, Ogun State. It was after her secondary
education that she went to study at Kentucky, only to return to Nigeria a
couple of months ago. She has no intention to practise accounting.
She
says, “Entertainment has always been part of me. Even when I was young, I would
stand in the front of a mirror, acting out the fashion part of me. I never
wanted to be a lawyer or anything. God blessed me with a lot of talents.”
She
adds that though her Lagos-based father who she describes as a ‘big and well
successful businessman’ inspired her to study Accounting. Neither he nor her
(Adunni’s) mum has any problem with her love for show business.
“My
father supports me 100 per cent. My mum is very proud of me. Americans don’t
care about this kind of thing. They support their children in whatever they
choose to do. So, I have no problem building a dream in the entertainment
industry. The fact is that I have never been a copycat. I am not looking for
the fastest way to limelight. Rather, I want to express myself. My ambition is
to be recognised worldwide. But I want to be known for what I have done. I want
to be successful through hard work.”
While
Adunni says she does not give attention to men when they make suggestive moves
to her – say, on location – she enthuses that everyone welcomes her at work.
But when asked emphatically if men have been making all kinds of advances to
her, she says, “Obviously!”
On
how she became fluent in Yoruba, Adunni explains that from day one, she has
always been a fan of culture.
“I believe you must embrace who you are. I don’t understand why anybody
will want to say, ‘I try to run away from who I am’. You have to be yourself.
You have to be proud of yourself. That is why I want to speak Yoruba at every
opportunity I have – even when I am in the US.”
No comments:
Post a Comment