Hubert Ogunde
Hubert Ogunde | |
---|---|
Born |
Ososa, Ogun state, Nigeria | May 31, 1916
Died |
April 4, 1990 73) Cromwell Hospital, London, England | (aged
Occupation |
Investor Playwright Actor Theatre director Musician |
Oloye Hubert Adedeji Ogunde (31 May 1916 – 4 April 1990) was a Nigerian actor, playwright, theatre manager, and musician who founded the Ogunde Concert Party in (1945), the first professional theatrical company in Nigeria. He has been described as "the father of Nigerian theatre, or the father of contemporary Yoruba theatre".[1]
Ogunde starred in Mister Johnson,[1] the 1990 motion picture that also featured Pierce Brosnan. The movie was shot on location in Jos.
Background
Ogunde was born in Ososa, near Ijebu-Ode, Ogun State, Nigeria.[2] He worked as a teacher before joining the Nigerian police force. Like many of his theatre contemporaries, such as A. B. David, P. A. Dawodu, Layeni and G. T. Onimole, his theatre career began under the patronage of the Church. In 1944, he produced his first folk opera, The Garden of Eden and The Throne of God,[1] commissioned by the Lagos-based Church of the Lord, a sect of the Cherubim and Seraphim Society. The performance was in aid of the Church building fund. The huge success of the production spurred Ogunde on to writing more operas until he decided to leave his amateur status as an artist and turn professional. He founded Ogunde Theatre — the first contemporary professional company in Nigeria. By this act Ogunde began the rise of modern professional theatre in Nigeria, a movement in which he remains the supreme artist and father figure.
He is regarded as the doyen of traditional Nigerian drama.
Professional theatre work
The first play featured at Ogunde Theatre was entitled Tiger’s Empire. Premiered on 4 March 1946, Tiger's Empire was produced by The African Music Research Party and featured Ogunde, Beatrice Oyede and Abike Taiwo. The advertisement for the play was the result of Ogunde’s call for "paid actresses". It marked the first time in Yoruba theatre that women were billed to appear in a play as professional artists in Light in their own right. Tiger’s Empire was an attack on colonial rule. It was followed by Darkness and Light, although Ogunde does not remember writing it. This is the only play that has escaped his memory.[citation needed] A public outcry had been going on for a year over the growth of a "social evil" that was entering into Lagos society and corroding it. This evil was popularly known as the "Aso Ebi Craze", which required both men and women to buy the most expensive materials for social gatherings.
The rule was that: “When someone wants to celebrate a marriage or a funeral obsequies (sic) she chooses a piece of cloth to wear on the occasion and approaches relatives and friends to buy the same stuff to wear with her as uniform on the day. The number of people to wear the uniform with her will depend on her popularity and social connections.
“The custom has lent itself to much abuse in that the occasions for celebrating marriages of funerals occur so often that one may be asked by friends to buy ‘Aso Ebi’ more than ten times a year.” This craze of course bred intense competition with celebrants trying to outshine one another. It was a competition that delighted textile traders but which often ruined marriages, as women were known to leave husbands who could not afford to robe them, for lovers who could. Ogunde decided to make his first social satirical comment by writing a play designed to expose the vulgarity and ostentatiousness of the craze. He called the play Human Parasites, a tragedy in two acts, commenting that Aso Ebi is a social evil….
Aduke who kissed and keyed a thousand lovers for the sake of Aso Ebi… what happened when boys refused to be keyed is better seen than described”
He also produced two important plays: Yoruba Ronu and Otitokoro which refer to the political events in the western Nigeria and which led to the declaration of the state of emergency in 1963. He was the most prominent of the dramatist of the folk opera. He composed over 40 operas in Yoruba. His play Yoruba Ronu (Yoruba Think) was a satirical account of the strife that plagued Yorubas in the 1960s. It was banned in western Nigeria for sometime but was produced with great success in other parts of the country.
His other plays include Darkness and Light and Mr. Devil's Money. He utilized the commercial repertoire of Yoruba theatre, frequently featuring both European instrument and drums in his plays, and he married all the actresses in order to keep the group together. Because of his various tours, his theatre became Alarinjo, a travelling theatre.
Personal life and legacy
Clementina Oguntimirin later married Chief Ogunde and became Adesewa Ogunde or Mama Eko (Lagos Mama), as she was popularly known by her fans in the 1960s, after taking the leading part in the popular play of that name. She had five children for him. The two senior girls, Tokunbo and Tope, are now leading members of the company. Ogunde became the leading producer of Yoruba celluloid movies, with J'ayesinmi (Let the world rest) and Aiye (Life!) blazing the trail.
Oguntimirin died in a road accident on September 1970 en route to a scheduled performance in Ilesha. The following year, Ogunde wrote a play in her memory entitled Ayanmo. Her death was mourned throughout the country and press and mass-media coverage of her death and funeral was extensive. Ogunde died on 4 April 1990 at London's Cromwell Hospital following a brief illness.[citation needed] A portrait of Ogunde hangs in the National Gallery of Modern Art, Lagos.[3]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Ogunde, Chief Hubert (1916-90), in Martin Banham, Errol Hill, George Woodyard (eds), The Cambridge Guide to African and Caribbean Theatre, Cambridge University Press, 1994, p. 76.
- ↑ Subair Mohammed, "Hubert Ogunde, father of Yoruba Theatre", Daily Newswatch.
- ↑ "NATIONAL GALLERY OF MODERN ART (NGMA), LAGOS:". National Gallery of Art. Retrieved 2011-05-22.
External links
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