CNN’s ‘African Voices’ profiles Nigerian filmmaker, Peace Anyiam-Osigwe
Airs Friday: 07:30;
Saturday: 02:30; Sunday: 08:00, 05:30; Monday: 09:30, 04:30; Tuesday: 04:30
CNN’s African Voices,
a weekly show that highlights Africa's most engaging personalities, will this
week feature Nigerian filmmaker and founder of the Africa Movie Academy Awards (AMMA), Peace Anyiam-Osigwe.
After
working on several movies and documentaries in Nigeria's film industry,
popularly known as Nollywood, Peace Anyiam-Osigwe founded the Africa Movie
Academy Awards in 2005. The awards have since grown into one of the most
prestigious film award shows on the continent, changing the way Nigerians are
seen around the world. Her passion is film; and by turning that passion into a
mission, she has given the African continent a voice on the big screen.
Speaking
on issues of film-making in Nigeria and the idea behind AMAA, Osigwe said,
“When I first came back to Nigeria, I realized that the biggest issue with us
as filmmakers was the lack of acknowledgement and actually celebrating
ourselves for the work that we do. And Nollywood was not being given the
recognition that it deserved at the time,” she said.
Nollywood is one of the most popular
industries in Nigeria. It’s a massive money-maker that has thrown Africa’s
most populous country into the spotlight.
A big part of Nollywood's prestige comes from
the Africa Movie Academy Awards (AMAA). Nollywood films are seen all over the
African continent and in many of parts of the world, but breaking into
Hollywood is the next big step. 2013 was the ninth year of the annual awards
show and saw a return to its usual host city Bayelsa in southern Nigeria after
being held in Lagos last year.
This
week on African Voices, hear her inspiring story, as she works to elevate
Nollywood and African film to the next level.
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