Veteran Nollywood actress, Patience Ozokwor in a new interview has
opened up on the only regret she has in life, how her kids prevented her
from getting married again and the role her mum played in her first
marriage.
See excerpts from her interview with Punchng below…
Since the death of your husband, have you ever considered remarrying?
Yes. There was a time I wanted to remarry but my children said no.
They are all grown now. They said if they were young, they wouldn’t have
objected. Now that they are grown, they say they will be my husband and
they have been trying. The only thing they don’t do is go to bed with
me (laughs). They said that their friends would laugh at them that their
mother abandoned them, but I didn’t see it that way. It really brought
problems. I wanted to remarry but my sister and other relations came and
said that I should concede to them and I accepted but with the
condition that they would also listen to me anytime I tell them to stop
being friends with any of their friends that I don’t like and they
agreed. So we have been managing one another.Do you have any regrets in life?
The only regret I have in life is that I wasn’t allowed to marry the
man of my choice. That is it but I was able to cope. I had suitors, I
was going to choose one among them but my parents said that I would
marry their choice. If they had allowed me, I would have loved to make
my choice.You got married early in life following your parents’ bidding. Was it that you were betrothed to him?
No, I wasn’t betrothed to him, but my mother was a kind of woman that
always liked to punish any child that misbehaved publicly. You know all
those Christian mothers that would be in the disciplinary section to
punish children. So, she didn’t want her child to come out of secondary
school and not get married because she was afraid you could bring her to
where she had been punishing people. So she insisted I must get
married. I said okay but I had a suitor. But she said no. I didn’t know
what to do because I had put all my eggs in one basket; he was in the
University of Nigeria, Nsukka. I was waiting to go to school so that I
would marry him but my mother wouldn’t wait. So I had to obey her. There
was a big fight but in our days, you would not be the one to say I will
marry this person; it was your parents that would have the final say in
your marriage, so I had to give up.How would you describe your childhood? Were you stubborn?
I was not stubborn and I was not quiet. It was all play, play, play. But I was loved by so many people around.
At the time you ventured into acting, what were your parents’ reactions?
Only my father was still around and he was excited seeing me in a
movie. Like my husband too, he would say (to our children), come and
play your mother’s film for us to watch. They enjoy my movies. My
immediate younger brother, who is in the US, will say that I have found
my talent and that is why it has swallowed me.If you were not an actor, what else would you have been in life?
I would be cooking. I still cook till today.