By Sani Mu’azu
Just like me, Saint Obi’s formative years in creativity as an actor started from NTA Jos in the late 1980s. He was then working with NIPOST as a staff in Jos, Plateau State, but even then, he had studied theatre arts at the University of Jos and his heart was always on the silver screen. And he sees me as an elder brother and a friend.
After a few stints in Jos, Obinna took the plunge and moved to Lagos where, with the advent of the home video phenomenon, he snowballed into national recorning and became Saint Obi – ‘the Saint Obi’. Jos became proud of him and his achievements as an A-list actor as his filmography credits continued to grow.
We had discussed working with Saint Obi on a national unity project I conceived in which he was to play the role of an Igbo engineer that speaks Hausa fluently. It was also an action package and Saint Obi loved action. The idea of delivering lines in Hausa excited him saying the North would see him in a different light. But the project was not to be. It was that project that kept us talking for a very long time until he disappeared into oblivion.
Saint Obi was a Jos boy and I was not surprised when I heard that he passed on quitely here in Jos. It was heartbreaking though to realise that he came back home but never got in touch with us, his hommies.
Ashes to ashes, dust to dust. We are definitely going to miss Saint Obi from the stage. The industry is going to miss him when it takes a retrospective look at the various movies he led and the various roles this great thespian played as an actor.
My sincere condolences to the industry, our colleagues in Jos but more specifically, to his immediate family for such a huge loss.
Sleep well brother. Sleep well.