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Sundra Oakley, The Survivor
Keisha Shakespear-Blackmore, Staff Reporter
The
Jamaica Gleaner - Monday | January 8, 2007
The
young, energetic, ambitious, mother of one living abroad has
placed Jamaica on Hollywood's map being the only Jamaican to be on
the popular, Survivor, a reality series on CBS.
Though she was born in the
United States of America to Jamaican parents, Sundra Oakley is an
ambassador for the island. She is currently a cocktail waitress at
a Hollywood nightclub while pursuing an acting career. She has
appeared on CSI: Miami (also aired on CBS), Strong Medicine, Sex
and the City, several national commercials and has appeared off
Broadway.
Oakley made it to the top
four on Survivor: Cook Islands, about 13,000 miles from New
Zealand in the South Pacific Ocean. The show is about outwitting,
outplaying, and outlasting others. You are placed on a deserted
island for 39 days without food, clothing or any other necessities
while you compete against others both physically and mentally.
"You go from eating regularly to
starving. You have to hunt, fish and climb trees; whatever it
takes to find food," she said. On the other hand, the mental
aspect had to do with forming relationships with others.
"You had to get to know people, see how
to maneuver and vote out people to keep yourself in a good
position."
Survival Training
She pointed out that they did a one-day
survival training course before the show where the contestants
learned which foods can be eaten and the ones that are poisonous.
She told Flair that she did not have a burning desire to be on the
show but decided to give it a try after she was approached. She
had just completed a commercial for Hallmark Cards in Kansas City
and was heading home. At the airport, a lady who overheard her
telephone conversion about the commercial approached her.
"She told me she had a friend who was an
assistant casting director for a TV show, Survivor, and asked if I
would like to be on it."
Oakley gave the lady her contact information
and got a call from the casting director Erika Shay, a few days
later. A demo tape followed and the rest is now history.
Survivor
On the island, the contestants were provided
with a barrel of water. However, Oakley said, "it was the
most wretched-smelling, mosquito- infested water I have ever seen.
We were forced to boil it."
The show is a game of strategy and
manipulation: "You are forced to operate on an optimal level
while you're tired, hungry, dirty and wet. It's no joke."
For her, the experience was the hardest, most
anxiety-ridden thing she had ever done. With a sense of
accomplishment, she leans back in the chair and reflects: "It
was also the most amazing thing I've ever done. I have been
empowered. You see, I was at a point in my life where I was
searching for something because I knew there was more to
life."
Her eyes widen as she says, "You know
when you're so raw and close to nature you become very
primal." When she is out there in the wild, Oakley notes, she
is aware of a supreme being. "Whenever I had a very
conflicting question such as who to vote off, I would hear God's
voice."
Sleeping With Rats
Sleeping with rats was the most challenging
part for her.
"It was mentally hard for me. Even eating
maggots did not bother me as much, I was hungry and nothing
mattered," she said, her eyes squinting. Her maggot-eating
debut occurred after she won a challenge and was rewarded with an
invitation to a feast with the villagers. Both she and her
teammates took back some of the chicken and pork that was on the
menu. Not having a refrigerator to put the food in it attracted
insects.
"While we were eating some of the
leftover food, one of my team members asked, "Is there
something crawling on the food?" I just brushed it aside and
said "Oh well," and continued eating."
She notes that she now understands a little
bit about starvation and how people who are starving feel. She
told Flair that the experience was phenomenal. However, when she
was asked if she would do it again, her response was "Hell
no!"
"But it is the best thing I have ever
done and nothing in my life can compare to that experience. I feel
very lucky to have had such an experience," she added. On the
show she learnt that she was stronger than she gave herself
credit.
"There's a whole world out there, grab
it, live fearlessly and seek the impossible."
Wicked Wicked Games
After her Survivor stint, she went back home.
She arrived in the U.S.A. on Saturday, August 5, 2006, and by the
following Thursday, she received a call that she got a part in the
soap opera, Wicked Wicked Games. She had done an audition prior to
going on Survivor for the TV show Watch Over Me but being away,
they gave her a part in Wicked Wicked Games instead. The show is
currently aired on My9 TV (formerly known as UPN). Wicked Wicked
Games is a show that looks and feels like Melrose Place. Oakley
plays the role of a mystery woman who comes into town delivering
messages.
Motherhood
While pursuing her acting career and working
in a nightclub, Oakley is also a full-time mother. She said she
never saw being a mother and pursuing her dreams as juggling. What
she does instead is try not to let things overwhelm her.
"I have a great son and we are blessed.
Plus, we have great a support system; family and friends who love
and support us." Her five-and-a-half year-old son, Carsun
Hall, is used to having a mother in showbiz. In fact, while she
was on Survivor, he told all his friends to watch the show.
Her goal is not only to do film but to also do
situation comedies, theatre and one-hour dramas. She knew at 13
years of age that she wanted to be an actress and has been doing
just that. She notes that for the first time in her life, she is
learning a lot about and taking care of herself. Though she is
single at the moment, she is open to possibilities but will not
settle for less than she wants.
Hobbies
Oakley's hobbies include dancing, traveling to
new countries, reading, kung fu and capoeira (a Brazilian form of
dance-fighting), snuggling on the couch with her son to watch
movies and sleeping whenever she can. Her favourite sports are
running and boxing. She said she likes anything that questions the
boundaries of the body, anything that lets her search a little
deeper. For her, boxing is a sport that allows one to let out
one's aggression.
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The Aitu Four final four contestants
in the 'Survivor Cook Island', reality series on CBS
making their debut on the red carpet. From left: Ozzy
Lusth, Sundra Oakley, Becky Lee and Yul Kwon |
"At first I did not understand it but
it's like choreography and I love to dance. I've been doing it
since I was knee high."
She is proud to be the first Jamaican on
Survivor and is always looking for ways to promote Jamaica to the
world. "One of my goals is to be an ambassador of the new
image of Jamaica because it is about time."
New Projects:
Oakley has written two children's books
inspired by her son. Plans for new projects include:
Designing eclectic children wear - funky,
rock, hip and Caribbean-inspired clothing;
Working with Jamaican youth - doing something
meaningful not just dumping money into a charity organisation;
Her own television show.
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