Skip to main content

I am Ozioma - Mercy Johnson

Mercy with a shaven head
Update: Feb 13th, 2011

Star actress, Mercy Johnson Ozioma a.k.a. Mercy Johnson, speaks about her life, the movie industry and other issues

Q: You have played different roles in the Nigerian movie industry to the extent that your fans dont know the kind of person you are. How will you describe yourself?

A: I am like the girl next door. Most people know me as Mercy Johnson but did not bother to find out about the Ozioma aspect of me. Mercy Johnson Ozioma are my real names and Ozioma in my dialect (Kogi State) means a girl with good luck. The fourth child in a family of seven, I was born about 26 years ago to an ex-military officer. I left my mother at the age of two to live with my father who was constantly being transferred from one station to another as a military man. I am proud of my dad because he taught me all I needed to know about crossing the bridge from being a child to an adult.

Q: Was acting part of your childhood ambition?

A: After my secondary school education, I failed the UME exams and came back to Lagos to get a degree and while that was on, I watched Genevieve Nnaji in a movie titled Sharon Stone. I later approached a friend for assistance to feature in a movie. He stared at my boobs and hips and told me that I would make a good actress. He later took me to the National Theatre, but a role did not come until a year later, when I had my first lead role in a film titled The Maid.

Q: So, what was the experience like?

A: The Maid was my starting point and it was quite challenging to play the lead role because it was my first movie. I was fidgeting when I saw the likes of Eucharia Anunobi who I regarded as screen goddess during my secondary school days. I never thought I would make it with people like that. So when I saw her, I was so excited and considered standing beside her as sacred. She actually realised that and later helped me by giving me the needed courage.

Q: How would you assess your exploits in the movie industry?

A: I have grown with time. There have been the good and bad times; there have been rumours and scandals. Sometimes when I cry in movies, it wasnt the script that made me cry, but when I go back to my humble beginning and the height Ive attained now, I give thanks to God. When I remember how we moved into an uncompleted building and had to take cover whenever it rained because of the condition of the house; how my brother did a menial job as a bricklayer to earn a living and those days when we rolled over a stick to cover the windows up till the point when I started acting and raised money to cover the roof; when I recall those days we were living with lizards because the floor and the walls of the house were not plastered, or when I had scars as a result of my several falls, I give glory to God.

Q: Was there anything you did as a child that you wouldnt want to do now?

A: When I was in secondary school, I would wash my mates clothes and polish their shoes to get paid so that I could also pay my brothers school fees and whenever names of people owing school fees were mentioned, I was always on top of the list. I faced a lot of embarrassment in school. My teachers flogged me; my uniform was always torn and tattered and when someone stole, they pointed at me because of my poor condition. It was a miserable life, but today, I thank God I lived a wretched life throughout my school days. I faced so much humiliation and that made me shy. Amidst all these, my greatest inspiration came from my dad and that kept me going. I witnessed lots of sad moments. I failed my first JAMB examination but passed on the second attempt. If I could have my way, I want to be a child again and live big.

Q: Was there any distraction between your childhood and spinsterhood?

A: Maybe those days when I had troubled mind. For instance, there was a time I stopped schooling to hawk pure water, plantain and other things. Do you know I was once a housemaid and also did some menial jobs for a particular artiste to make ends meet? I washed her clothes and did some other things in her home town to survive.

Q: Didnt you have a boyfriend then?

A: Never. Who would want to befriend a girl with torn dresses, bad stockings and nothing to offer? The barracks life didnt give an opportunity to such. But today, men flock around me.

Q: To an extent, people see you as a controversial actress. What can you tell us about this?

A: A lot of untrue things have been said about me. For instance, they said I stole money, while some said I snatched peoples husbands. I have come to realise that it doesnt cost people anything to cook up lies about me and those were not coming until a telecommunication company called me for a deal. The next day, scandalous stories started flying and honestly, I lost the N50 million deal because of that.

Q: Has there been any time you took a script in exchange for sex?

A: It is a matter of choice. If you are approached with such and you feel your body is cheap and worth the script, then go ahead, but it is also an individual thing. If any lady tells you in Nollywood that it hasnt happened to her, it is a cheap lie. Most people are scared of telling the truth, but the truth makes upcoming ones to watch their steps without making mistakes. Yes, such had come my way, but if you sleep around for roles, will you also sleep around to make fans love your work? It only takes Gods intervention for one to be successful in the industry.

Q: What part of your body do you treasure most?

A: My hips. I would like to insure them if there is need for it.

Q: How do you maintain your shape?

A: I think taking exercises plays a great role. I have a tracksuit I bought from Germany which I wear to jog with each time I join my brothers for exercise.

Q: Do you sometimes get carried away while playing romantic roles?

A: Whenever there is need for romantic roles, I close my eyes and say this could have been avoided. I dont really feel anything. We only teach with our roles.

Q: Any advice for upcoming actresses?

A: Dont come into the industry because you want to be famous, but because you love the art of acting. Then try to appreciate those who are there before you. Add your comment here

Source: OnlineNigeria.com

Comments

  1. ozioma, you the most beautiful actress Nigeria ever produced, do not let no one frustrate you, keep doing good, tomb up for you and high five.
    akoro ozi ada ni,
    you made ebirras proud.
    god bless.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I dont Like dis girl 1 bit

    ReplyDelete
  3. you too much. you are the best. your carriage, charisma and beauty dazzles. keep you head up bcos hollywood is suppose to be your dwelling place.

    ReplyDelete
  4. mercy, keep doing yo thing.as 4 the stalkers n talkers, they wil always be there.
    mercy ug

    ReplyDelete
  5. Blessing Oziohu from GhanaSunday, 22 May 2011 at 22:06:00 GMT+1

    Baby I am proud of you. I wish to meet u one day. for your humbleness and transparency, u will never go down. may the Good Lord be with you.

    ReplyDelete
  6. The important thing is not being afraid to take a chance. Remember, the greatest failure is to not try. Once you find something you love to do, be the best at doing it.you are already doing it,keep it up,the sky is your limit

    ReplyDelete
  7. I really appreciate u mercy, but stop exposing ur body plz.Wa wu reyi onimika ba. jamila Abuja.

    ReplyDelete
  8. mercy thanks for the word of advice you have shared with us.i really appreciate it

    ReplyDelete
  9. Mercy,i rilly appreciat d wondaful role dat u alwaz play in movie industry.more greas 2 ur elbow!4rm ohunene.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Dearest mercy,i use to dislike u before,but sweediee i truely appreciate ur kaind of pessn now i dnt no u in pessn but i tink u a gud pessn apart from actn processs..God will bless u

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Please include your name in your comments.
Thanks.

Popular posts from this blog

Ebira Names and their meaning, Names, Meanings, Sex

Asimi: If mankind will allow me the survival of this child. F Ajimituhuo: Spare me today till tomorrow, which day metaphorically continues till eternity (since tomorrow has no end). M Avidime: The initiator who work is subsequently perfected by those following him in life. M Asipita: A child of History. M Amewuru: The harbinger of confusion, or the man who causes chaos. M Adeku: Father of masquerade. M Adabara: Father of the  compound. M Adajinege: The tallest of them. M Adavize: Father is wealth. M Adeiza: Father of fortune/gift/kindness. M Adomuha: Father of able body man. M Adooro: The one that is a stumbling block Ahovi: A chief custodian of the traditional Oracle. M Aduvo: Father of hand. M Ajooze: The one standing on the way. M Adinoyi: The father of the multitude who serves as a protective umbrella shielding others in need of such protection. M Adaviruku: Name usually given to the heir of the family. M Ajinomo: In memory of Ebira war with the Fukanis where...

The case of Ahmed Awela, Murtala (Eti Bobo) among other Ebira youths

Ismail M. Kabir, Lagos. Between controversial existence and a contentious exit. There are various sides to a story. For an event that happens with few or no significant eye witness, the news come in different versions; some partially correct, others completely cooked up. In some cases, such non-witnessed event pass round as rumour until eventually confirmed. Rumour it was, when a phone call from Okene announced the death of two famous Ebira youths! They were killed by the Police, reported the news. Being on a Sunday when nothing too special should ensue save for the usual church services and social functions, the news sounded as the most unexpected, as a matter of fact, incredible! The thought of losing such youths on an ordinary day like Sunday undoubtedly was the reason for the astonishment. Not a single person of Ebira origin, within or outside the soil would believe such shocker upon first hearing. Text messages, phone calls and of course physical enquiries lingered, all in an atte...

The Obege legend

In the earliest generations when the art of magic was yet a myth to the people, there was born a boy into a family of hunters in the village of Eika - one of the six communities that comprised the ancestral groups. He was believed to have been born with a leaf in his hand and to the elders of then, that was prognostic of what he would be - a native healer. And had grown up performing wonders. His kinsmen were all hunters, they would deny the boy the opportunity to follow them hunting, purely on age ground - and he was really too young to go hunting in the forest. They would leave him in the house with the women as they set out on their hunting expedition. But they had meet the young Obege in the forest roasting a fair member of the forest’s game, all alone - and unarmed! The elders had to defer to this wonderful boy. Obege as an adult was more than human. His fame had spread all over the land: he was a healer of most seemingly incurable diseases, he was a rain maker, assumed more divin...