‘How I got my Glo deal’...Kate Henshaw
Jan 7th 2010

Kate Henshaw-Nuttal many stakeholders and of-
course, lovers of the Nigerian home video
industry would agree, is one of the very few
actresses that are largely scandal-free.
In fact, her reputation, when compared with any
other built over 16 years in the industry,
appears to always go ahead of her. Little wonder
she tops the charts as the most patronised
Nigerian actress on both consumer and other
products.
Apart from being the face of ONGA seasonings,
she is also an ambassador for telecommunications
giant, Globacom. She also doubless as an
ambassador for the National Cervical Cancer
Prevention Programme of Nigeria (NCCPPN). In
addition, only recently, Henshaw-Nuttal was
chosen, alongside a few notable Nigerians, by
the Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation
(NTDC), as an Ankara -ambassador– the new
African fabric-based dress code promoted by the
agency.
Nuttal said she owes a lot to the late Nollywood
actor/producer/director, J.T Tom West who took
her to her first audition in 1993. After, the
hit movie. When the Sun Sets was shot, she went
ahead to feature in other top-rate movies such
as Domitilla, Closed Chapter, Compromise, Games
Men Play, Stronger than Pain, Show Me Heaven, A
Million Tears, Rivals and a whole lot of others.
Henshaw-Nuttal studied Biochemistry at the
University of Calabar and then furthered at the
School of Medical Laboratory Sciences, Lagos
University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Idi Araba.
Her mother, she says, who is “extremely
hardworking and prayerful,” is her role model;
and her philosophy of life is “stand for what
you believe in, even if the crowd is on the
other side.”
And her take on why she has remained
scandal-free: “I feel my work as an artiste
should be my driving force and not my personal
life, so I try to steer clear from problems or
controversies, so to speak. I try not to leave
room for insinuations, although being out there
in the public eye comes with its pains as people
tend to judge you by what they read in the
papers.”
Henshaw Nuttal is married to a Briton and they
are blessed with a lovely daughter.
Lately, you’ve been quite busy with
projects other than what many Nigerians know you
by, acting. Judging by the frequency at which
you appear at such projects, are we to conclude
that you are gradually easing out of acting?
Not at all. My doing other projects doesn’t mean
I am leaving acting. I have always been an
active person right from my youth and I do try
to manage my time very well so as to attend to
all that I have to do. Yes, I have been involved
in a number of projects but I still make out
time to go on sets to do some jobs.
You are married with a kid. How do you
manage marriage with work?
The home front is as important as a basic
obligation. Now, with my kind of demanding job,
I am lucky to have a supportive husband and
daughter who know and understands my schedule of
work. Once that is sorted out, for an actress it
is easy for her to go all-out and do the job
after her heart. I happen to fall in that
category and that is the secret of my success.
Only a few weeks ago, you were announced
an ambassador for the cervical cancer prevention
programme. Why do you think you were picked for
this job?
Let me just say I had the priviledge of being
made a golden link member of the National
Cervical Cancer Prevention Programme of Nigeria
(NCCPPN) on the 23rd of September, this year.
This honour has put me in the fore-front of
activities geared towards sensitising the public
on the deadly virus. The activities run under
the mass medical mission of the NCCPP. Prior to
this time, I have had meetings with the Mission,
where I was told about what they are doing to
create awareness on cervical cancer prevention
which is the second largest cancerous ailment in
women. The aim is to establish cervical cancer
screening centres in each Local Government Area
in Nigeria, such that by the end of the year
2010, we would have achieved universal
awareness, train health workers from every LGA
in Nigeria on the principles and practice of
cervical screening and screen and treat 100,000
rural or under-priviledged women, free of
charge. As a woman, I feel obliged to use my
status for good and help fellow women to know
their status and also help prevent the spread of
the cancer to other parts of the body, as most
women will be exposed to it during their
lifetime and the virus has been known to have a
developmental stage of five-30 years! So you
could be carrying the virus as you walk around
and may not know, let alone do anything about it
until it becomes too late. I wish to use this
medium to tell every women that the mode of
detection is simple and painless and it takes
just five minutes.
You still haven’t told me why you were
chosen?
I think the Mission is in the best position to
answer this question. But going by their letter
to me, it says and I quote: “You have been
chosen in order to boost the cervical cancer
prevention programme as an individual with deep
civil compassion, impeccable personal character
and widespread social influence…”
Have you experienced this disease and if
no, have you undergone test yet?
As a way of leading by example, I have done
screening and I came out negative and no, I do
not have a personal experience of the virus.
However, it s pertinent for every woman of
active sex age to get screened at an interval of
every four to six months. I don’t intend to
relent on this.
Now do you believe your involvement in
this cause would help eradicate the disease in
the country?
As someone in the public eye, who is also looked
upon as a role model by many, I can help spread
the word through this interaction I am having
with you now. I can also assist in fund raising,
advising the Mission on how to achieve its
target goals, participate in the mission’s
activities and help increase awareness on the
need to get checked (screened) and also use my
goodwill to get corporate oranisations and
individuals to help sensitise the public on the
screening and treatment process.
Let’s now talk about your journey into
the Nigerian movie industry. Would you say it
had been a wonderful experience, so far?
My experience in the industry has been
worthwhile and one which I would not exchange or
regret. It has its high and low moments, but
more on the positive side. It is a good thing
that the industry has helped to put Nigeria in
positive light before the rest of the world in
terms of entertainment to Nigerians in the
Diaspora and non-Nigerians too.
How did you manage to make a break into
the industry?
It was 16 years ago and my entry into the film
industry was through the encouragement of the
late J.T Tom West who took me along to my first
audition in 1993. The movie, When the Sun Sets,
turned out to he a hit. My character in the
movie was Onome.
You seem to have developed a flair for
soap operas these days, as you now feature in
many. Also, you do quite a number of stage
productions. Are you giving yourself a breather
from home videos?
No, I still do it. Maybe the movies I have shot
have not been released into the market yet. But
on television, more people get to see soaps.
Given a choice, I would not pick just one as
being the most challenging or one that I would
rather stick with because they all have
different levels of challenges.
You have been married for years now. But
looking at the trend, some actresses appear not
to be so lucky; what then would you say is
keeping you in your matrimonial home?
I have been married for 10 years now and my
husband understands the kind of work I do and
the attendant lack of privacy that goes with it.
We discuss things together and he is happy to
play a supportive role when it comes to letting
me be myself, when it comes to my work and all
that it entails.
Tell me about your family?
I come from a family of four children (two boys
and two girls) and my parents are still alive
and they have instilled in us good values of
hardwork, discipline, respect and honesty. We
were comfortable growing up.
How did you get your Glo deal and the
rest?
As a notable face in the film industry, Glo
chose me along with some of my colleagues to
project the Nigerian brand. Also, the NTDC chose
to identify with me and a few others to project
the Nigerian national dress brand (Ankara).
Tourism is very essential to any country’s image
and it is a sustatainable and veritable tool.
Onga also is a great seasoning and the company
saw a need for a young, motherly figure to
encourage our young ones to eat and cook well-
balanced meals using the best seasoning in the
market. I have also presented a couple of
programmes in the past and still do because I
like to be versatile.
You once released an album years ago,
are you done with music?
No. I love singing and will always love music.
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