She won the Most Promising Actress
at the Best of Nollywood (BON) awards in 2013 and has also won other awards
including Best New Actress at City People awards in 2011 and Best Rising Star
at Nollywood Movie Awards 2012. She recently turned a lot of heads when
she released semi nude photos of herself on the beach. In this exclusive
interview with Showtime Celebrity, She tells us what she’s been up to and more:
Sylvya Oluchy is a beautiful, classy
and highly intelligent lady. After graduating from Nnamdi Azikiwe University
with a degree in Theatre Arts, she went on to Nollywood and has starred in a
couple of TV series and movies.
How has your career been so far?
So far so good, we thank God. I’ve
been in Lagos now for about almost 3 years. The period I’ve been here, I’ve won
3 Awards and I’ve been on a couple of movie sets, done some series of which the
popular one is Lekki Wives. I’m in Lekki Wives Season 2, so it’s
okay, things are getting better and there’s a serious growth going on in
Nollywood with the kind of movies we’re doing now and the kind of attention to
detail. It wasn’t there before, so I’m just really happy to see that growth.
Which is your most successful movie
so far?
Alan Poza did very well during its run. Another one that was really
successful was On Bended Knees. That had Chioma Chukwuka, myself and
Seun Akindele, but I’m really looking forward to Being Mrs Elliot which
will hit the cinemas in a couple of weeks, because it’s packed with stars and
the storyline is so awesome so look out for that one. Then also, Lekki Wives
season 3 will soon be in the works so I’m also looking forward to that.
How did it feel winning the Most
Promising Actress at the Best of Nollywood awards?
It was really fun. Before that, I
had won Best New Actress at Citypeople 2011 and I had won Best Rising Star at
Nollywood Movie Awards 2012. You know most of all these things, when you hear
you’re nominated sometimes they put some really big names up against you so you
go with a lot of anxiety. For me, there are two big rewards in doing this job.
One is when people see you on the
street and tell you they enjoy your movie. The second is when you get an award
because an award means that even among your peers, you are been recognised, so
it kind of makes you want to work harder. It keeps you willing to grow, so you
don’t just sit back and feel like I’m the star, I’m the bomb. It keeps you
learning because the kind of job we do is a job where you need to know
something about everything because you don’t know what character you’re going
to play.
Who inspired you into acting?
My Mother. When I was much younger,
in the broad classification, I would say I was a nerd because I had glasses growing
up as a child, I was very quiet, I was shy, I was always with my books. I used
to be those kinds of kids that were at the bottom of the social ladder so I
used to always get bullied by even my mates, not just my seniors, my mates used
to always bully me.
So once I got home, I didn’t have
many friends but I had lots of toys. So I’d just pick my toys and I’d start to
change my voice with each character. Sometimes I’d make my voice deep for the
guys or, made it thin for the girls, and my mother would just be watching me.
So, she kept telling me I would be
good as an actress. I can say I grew up everyday hearing ‘acting will fit you,’
so, it kind of sticks in my subconscious. When it was time for JAMB, I just
tried out this Theatre Arts thing I’ve been hearing all my life and I went in
for it and the rest is history.
How did you come out of your shell?
Many people don’t know this but shy
people actually make some of the best Actors because shy people have so much in
play in their minds. Many times they have played out different characters in
their little, quiet worlds and when the opportunity presents itself they sort
of explode. That’s how it is for me too, although these days, I’ve overcome my
shyness, I can talk to anybody anywhere in fact, I think I’m now on the
talkative side of things because now people tell me “You talk too much, keep
quiet”.
My childhood really prepared me for
what I was doing because right from when I was a little girl, I used to always
make up characters in my head, make up voices and emulate different accents.
That childhood obsession of going into myself and dragging up different
personalities is now paying off because I feel like I have multiple personality
syndrome, not multiple personality disorder because I know how to control mine.
Have you had any setbacks in your
career so far?
Yeah. There’s this movie I did and I
was the lead character but the movie never came out. I felt really saddened
that after all the hardwork and everything I put into it, the movie never came
out because the producer had so many ups and downs and he lost some money and
everything. And there was one movie I was doing and I was removed from the run-in
because I couldn’t speak Yoruba.
What has been the high-point of your
career?
I guess the highest point so far
will be whenever I win an award. I told you I’ve won 3 now so just going on
that stage and having everybody finally seeing you that this is the Sylvya
Oluchy, it’s cool.
You recently said you could act nude
in a movie?
There was a bit of mix-up in that
story. They only asked me what I think of nudity in movies and I said it
depends on the movie. If you’ve watched The Gods Must Be Crazy, the
nudity in that movie was done for accuracy because people then went about nude.
So, when they asked me I said it
depends on the script. It depends on the director I’ll be working with because
it’s all about the director’s picture, it’s the director’s story. If I know I’m
working with a director who I trust, who I know will make everything tastefully
done, where it won’t end up looking like some badly made pornography and it’s a
good script, I’ll make my decision.
Can you do a sex scene in a movie?
Yeah. I mean in Lekki Wives I
have a couple of kissing and romantic scenes, no nudity but there was a lot of
kissing and lots of making out so it comes with the job.
What’s the craziest thing you can do
in a movie?
It depends on the script, the
director and the circumstance. I never say never because you don’t know
tomorrow. You might just run into some script that blows your mind and you
don’t know who the director behind it will be and you might just decide to say
for this director and for this script, I’ll put in a little bit more. So you
never know what’s going to come your way or you never know I might just see
myself in Hollywood one day, you never know so I never say never. Nudity is not
a big deal.
You released some semi nude pictures
on the beach. Can you go topless?
It depends. There’s a level you’ll
get to in your modeling career that you just have to do things like that. The
highest paid models, the ones you see on Victoria’s Secret runways, I’m sure
they do stuff like that. It comes with the territory so before you go into a
career like that, you have to prepare yourself.
Even though that’s not really where
I’m channeling myself to, it depends on why you’re doing it and the outlet.
Gisele Bundchen is like the highest paid model in the world today and I’ve seen
a lot of topless photos for Vogue and other things, she’s just doing her job.
You always look ravishing on red
carpets. Do you have a particular designer?
I’m self styled. Whenever you see
me, I style myself because I’m good at designing clothes. In fact, I’m working
on launching my own label, it’s called Vyachi.
How would you describe yourself?
I’m a happy-go-lucky kind of person.
I take life as it comes. I’m very adventurous, anybody who knows me, knows that
much about me. If I go somewhere and there are like five things to eat on a
table and I’ve eaten four, it’s that one I’ve not eaten that I’ll want to eat
that day and then besides that, I’m into doing things like Hiking, I like to go
out on the water, on a boat, when I was in the North then, we used to always go
for mountain climbing because there are a lot of mountains in the North. I’m an
outdoor kind of person. I like to be around nature, water, mountains, trees and
animals.
Do you travel a lot?
I travel every once and again, maybe
not as much as I’ll like to but you know this our career, the busier you get,
the more you tend to travel. On my own now, maybe sometimes family vacations, I
do go every once in a while. I’ve been to the States and when I was much
younger, I schooled in London, did my primary school in St Theresa Finchley and
I’ve been to most countries in East Africa; Kenya, Uganda and Ethiopia.
What turns you on in a man?
Nothing out of the ordinary but
there are some things that I appreciate. I appreciate a man who works out, who
has a fit, toned body because I work out a lot too. But most of all I’m more
interested overall in a man’s brains than anything else because I like to talk,
I like to have intellectual conversations so I like a man who has a high IQ.
Which Nigerian musician do you like?
2 Face. 2 Baba is the best. I love 2
Face. His music makes sense and it is enjoyable at the same time. 2 Face is
deep and I like him for that
What’s your main philosophy of life?
My philosophy of life is simply to
be optimistic in any circumstance. You cannot kill yourself so whatever life
gives you, smile, take it like that and dream, hope and pray for a better
tomorrow. You only Live once, you’re never going to come back again so live out
loud, live as much as you can, do everything you’ve always wanted to do, don’t
keep on procrastinating, a lot of people procrastinate and say tomorrow,
tomorrow.
What more should people expect from
you?
Finding Love is already in cinemas, Being Mrs Elliot is coming out
very soon. The rest, I don’t think I’m at liberty to really mention now because
I’m still shooting. I always wait for my producers to give me the go-ahead
before I start talking about the job
Is there anything else you want to
say?
Vanguard is a very big newspaper so I want to use your platform to
beg those holding the Chibok girls to quickly release them. What has happened
has happened and I really believe that the Government will work harder to bring
those girls back.
Moving forward for the future, I’d
like to suggest that if it’s possible for them to maybe inculcate some kind of
mandatory self defense classes in schools for girls especially for girls in the
North because there’s nothing as good as a woman that can defend herself. I
know that if someone has a gun on your head, you can’t really do much but at
least, just know those basic skills of how to defend and disarm somebody.