For Nollywood actress,
 Ngozi Nwosu, life begins at 50. Having been to what she calls “hell and
 back”, the fair-skinned entertainer may have finally conquered the 
storm. Bubbling in a celebratory mood, Nwosu was resplendent in a black 
body fitting dress and blonde weave at an event organised to celebrate 
her birthday on Wednesday.
Save
 for a walking stick placed by her side, there was nothing to suggest 
that the actress recently underwent a surgery. For many years:
She
 brought laughter to many homes, playing, “Peaceful Peace”, one of the 
troublesome wives of Chief Fuji in the Amaka Igwe’s soap, Fuji House of 
Commotion, until she was diagnosed to have a kidney related ailment.
Nevertheless,
 Ngozi Nwosu said she remained upbeat throughout the ordeal. “I was 
positive throughout the experience but at a point I thought I would die 
and not make it to 50. But I have received the grace of God, and He has 
given me a new lease of life. It is like a second coming to life. God 
has given me my life, it is a gift I really treasure. And my advice to 
people is: just live your life, nobody knows tomorrow,” she said.
Unlike
 some of her colleagues who passed on before financial assistance could 
arrive, Nwosu has been lucky. Fans, colleagues and the Lagos State 
Government succeeded in raising the N6m lifeline required to offset her 
medical expenses in a UK hospital in December. But before respite came, 
the Imo State-born actress chose to keep mum about the true state of her
 health, which gave rise to a series of speculations.
Her
 silence was because she wanted to handle the situation on her own. She 
explained to Punch, “I felt it was something I could handle on my own. 
So, it was as if I turned a deaf ear, thinking and praying that it would
 be over soon; until God said, ‘No, my daughter, I will handle it the 
best way for you’, and here I am today.”
Between
 February and April, she had been undergoing treatment in the UK. In 
past interviews, Nwosu, who has been out of the acting scene in the last
 two years, said she was initially diagnosed of pile (haemorrhoid), and 
had an operation. She had already resumed working until she discovered 
that she had developed some issues with her kidneys.
Choosing
 not to comment on her personal life, thick-skinned Nwosu said she 
couldn’t be bothered about the speculations at the time.
She, however, declined to give more details on the nature of the ailment and treatment abroad.
“They
 (critics) said so many crazy things but I don’t want to think about it.
 I just want to thank God that I am alive today. I also thank the 
critics because they have contributed to making me strong and alive to 
prove them wrong. To those who felt this was the end of Ngozi Nwosu, I 
just want to tell them that this is just the beginning of Ngozi Nwosu.”
She
 also discarded reports making the round that she had been sighted at 
various movie locations. She explained: “I have only gone on the set of 
Fuji House of Commotion because I played a major role there, because 
they had been waiting for me all along and had run out of episodes. So I
 just had to be there to play a little of my role. It is just to tell 
people that I am still alive and I will be back on track.”
While
 she admitted her readiness to take up new scripts, the key word for 
now, according to her, is moderation. “I still need to rest, and if I 
have to work, I’ll do that at my own pace. I’m not going back to work 
fully. You will see that my gait is not really smooth. For now, I’m 
using a walking stick and that is going to take some time. I will be 
taking everything at my own pace, until I get back to the normal Ngozi 
Nwosu,” she noted.
Sounding
 a word of advice to her colleagues in the movie industry, Nwosu said, 
“They should always take time out to do medical checkups. Since the time
 I got sick, there are many people that have dropped dead. But I am 
still alive, I went through death and I am still alive.”
On
 her relationship with fellow actors, she has this to say, “I don’t have
 friends in the industry. When you are rich they are your friends, but 
when you are not, they leave you. Most of them are a flash in the pan so
 I can’t keep them.”
Looking
 forward to the future with bright expectations, Nwosu is already 
dreaming big, hoping to regain national prominence. “I wish for myself 
the best things of life. In fact I just wish someone can come and park 
the latest car in my house, and build a house for me. I don’t want my 
case to be like that of the Nigerian flag designer, Taiwo Akinkunmi, who
 almost died before they recognised him,” she noted.
 
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