Till date, people still talk about the role veteran actor Jibola
Dabo played in a soft-porn movie, “Dirty Secret” that starred himself,
Tonto Dikeh, late Muna Obiekwe, Geraldine Ejiogu, Ejine Okerefor, among
other acts.
In the movie, Tonto Dikeh acted the role of a spoilt child, who
sleeps with her father and her boyfriend. Her father, played by Jibola
Dabo, was a gynandrous, who also sleeps with his daughter’s boyfriend
played by Muna Obiekwe.
When the movie was released, fans tongue-lashed the three major
acts who played their roles like a smut movie. And now, in a new
interview with PUNCH, Jibola has confessed that he regrets playing that
role. Jibola told PUNCH:
Which movie would you say has been your most challenging ?
I hate to advertise for any movie and I believe every movie I have
been a part of has been challenging in several ways. However, the movie
that I had to put extra effort is also the movie I hate the most, ‘Dirty
Secrets.’ I played a role that is totally different from who I am in
reality. I hate the character I
played and for me to do it well, I had to become the
character. I had to hate myself while doing so. It was bad. After the
movie, I had to keep telling myself that the character I portrayed was
not who I am.
- Have you watched the movie?
I don’t want to see it. I have been asked if I could play such a role
again and I told them ‘yes’ but only if I have access to the
post-production stage. There are some things that should have been
edited in the movie that were not removed. There are some things an
actor would do to make his acting real that should be edited but they
released the movie like that. It was so raw and it was terrible for them
to put everything out there.
- You acted alongside the late Muna Obiekwe in the movie you’re talking about…
I felt sad about it. But the young man had been sad for a while
because he had been careless about his health. He drank too much alcohol
and he didn’t remember that he had a liver. He was also a chain smoker,
but of course, there are also people that do it and live longer. I was
saddened that we had lost another star because he was a great actor.
- How come you openly support polygamy; is it because your father was one?
No. It is because I am not a hypocrite. A lot of Nigerians are
hypocrites, especially the educated ones. When you have a wife and
several concubines, it is worse than being a polygamist. When polygamy
was accepted in our society, we did not have as many diseases as we do
have because you would bring the wife home. What I said was that I do
not have anything against polygamy; however, do not confuse fornication
and adultery with polygamy.
- Why are you not a polygamist then?
People actually think I am a polygamist. I am not one because I love
deeply. When I fall in love, I like to show off my woman. People think I
am a polygamist because I have children from different women.
- How come you have children from different women?
Growing up, I was notorious with ladies and they were notorious with
me as well. During that time, girls had this perception that they could
tie you down if they got pregnant for you. It happened to me with
different girls because I was very popular and good looking. The girls
kept coming to me. Also, there was the lack of knowledge of protection.
When I grew up, I met kids that I fathered and did not know because
their mothers did not tell me that they were pregnant.
- Which means that some women came to you only with the interest of having a child?
Yes, it is very true. People misjudge me now because of that. If a
girl went through what I faced as a child, the experience would be
tagged as child abuse. I had older ladies come to me for sex as a young
man. It was child abuse, but nobody was focusing on child abuse for boys
back then. Instead, people prefer to judge me. I would not be talking
about this now if I am not grown and have more understanding.
- But you could have turned down their advances.
I could not have turned them down, because my feeding depended on
that ‘aunty.’ It happened when I stayed with relatives. Some of their
female friends liked me and made me do things a young boy should not
indulge in.
- You dated popular actress, Ayo Mogaji, at some point in your life. What went wrong with the relationship?
I would say that the media made a pool out of a tea cup. She was my
girlfriend in the 80s and when I returned to Nigeria, she was still
unmarried. I funded a movie for her and we started dating again. She got
pregnant for me and that was it. The media began to say that her
husband abroad had come back home. I never got married to her; neither
did I go to her parents to ask for her hand in marriage. She was my
girlfriend and she got pregnant and I could not ask her to abort the
baby. I was old enough to have a child, so I had no objections. I love
my son a lot and now she has her husband.
- But why did you not get married to her?
Our lifestyles were not the same.
- Some believe you did not get married to her because it was reported that she normally got drunk at home.
No, it is not true. She was like that even before I came back to
Nigeria. I had known her for about three decades and she had always been
like that. That is her style. I read in the papers after she left me
where she said, ‘I drink, get drunk and smoke, so what?’ It was on the
front page. So if I could not take that, I would let her go.
- But as her lover, don’t you think you could have helped change her lifestyle?
I could not change her because I am not God, but I tried to convince her to stop.