Veteran film-maker, Amaka Igwe
Acclaimed film-maker, Amaka Igwe, is dead.
The producer of popular movies and soap
operas that include ‘Violated’, ‘Checkmate’ and ‘Fuji House of
Commotion’ passed on in Enugu, Enugu State on Monday following an asthma
attack.
She was 51.
According to family sources, the
prolific film-maker and her husband/business partner, Chief Charles
Igwe, were on a pre-production trip to the Coal City when she had the
attack.
They were said to be preparing for the production of a new Igbo soap.
Although she was said to have been
rushed to the hospital when the incident happened, she eventually
breathed her last at the clinic, thus throwing many of her associates
and fans into grief.
A stickler for professionalism and
mentor of several successful actors, Igwe is survived by her husband of
21 years, three children, an aged mother, siblings and a large extended
family.
Meanwhile, tributes have continued to pour in for the producer, who was also the founder of BoBTV Expo,Top Radio 90.9FM, Amaka Igwe Studios, and the newly-inaugurated Q Entertainment Networks.
A former Vice President, Alhaji Abubakar Atiku, described her as the jewel of Nollywood.
He noted in a statement by his media
office in Abuja that she had begun to make impact as far back as 1988,
when her ‘Decrees of Fate’ won four awards at the National Festival of
Television Programmes.
Founder of the African Movie Academy
Awards, Mrs. Peace Anyiam-Osigwe, said the news of the death threw her
off mental balance, saying the motion picture industry in Nigeria and
Africa would sorely miss the ‘revolutionary’ who raised the bar of
professionalism and artistic excellence early in Nollywood when it was
not fashionable.
Anyiam-Osigwe said, “Amaka Igwe gave
herself and applied herself to producing films and soaps that are
pacesetters. She was a creative entrepreneur of outstanding qualities
who came, saw and conquered in her 51 years of existence on earth.”
Similarly, the President of the Actors
Guild of Nigeria, Ibinabo Fiberesima; Nollywood stars such as Segun
Arinze, Fidelis Duiker and Don Pedro, stressed that Igwe was one of the
practitioners that gave the country’s contemporary film industry the
respect it has globally.
Also reacting to news of the passage, producers of AfricaMagic said she was an iconic film and TV producer.
It noted in a statement that as a tribute to her, it would soon begin a special screening of her works.
The statement added, “The African
creative arts industry has lost an admired and respected leader whose
vast knowledge, proven business acumen and boundless imagination made an
immeasurable contribution to the development and success of our
community.”
Culled from punch
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