Birthdate: July 24, 1969 (56 Years Old)
Birthplace: The Bronx, New York City, New York, USA
Jennifer Lopez, AKA J.Lo (birthname: Jennifer Lynn Lopez), has cut as wide and varied a showbiz path as any American performer. Not content with singing and dancing, Lopez has acted in a diverse range of movies, from Steven Soderbergh’s contemporary classic, Out of Sight (1998), to popular rom-coms like The Wedding Planner (2001) to dramas like Hustlers (2019), which scored Lopez a best-supporting award or runner-up from prestigious film critics organizations such as the Los Angeles Film Critics Association and the National Society of Film Critics.
Jennifer Lopez has also played a significant role as a producer, closely selecting her movie roles and projects, and setting a mold that has been imitated by other female stars such as Reese Witherspoon and Nicole Kidman, thus extending movie careers for women whose filmographies would typically thin out or vanish by the time they reached their 40s and 50s.
Jennifer Lopez’s movie career began in 1995 with a supporting role in the action movie Money Train with Wesley Snipes and Woody Harrelson. In her third feature, Lopez was directed by Francis Ford Coppola in Jack (1996), with Robin Williams and Diane Lane, and then by writer-director Bob Rafelson in the noir drama, Blood and Wine (1997), with Jack Nicholson, Judy Davis, and Michael Caine.
Her breakthrough as a movie star came soon after, with the 1997 release of Gregory Nava’s music biopic, Selena, chronicling the rise and tragic end of Tejano mega-star Selena Quintanilla. The busy year for Jennifer Lopez continued with Luis Llosa’s over-the-top chiller and sleeper hit, Anaconda, with Owen Wilson, Ice Cube, Jon Voight, and Eric Stoltz, and Oliver Stone’s superb crime thriller, U-Turn, with Sean Penn, Billy Bob Thornton, Joaquin Phoenix, Claire Danes, Voight, and Nick Nolte.
Jennifer Lopez was in the midst of what, in retrospect, was her most interesting and engaging period as a movie star when she joined director Steven Soderbergh for his peerless adaptation (with screenwriter Scott Frank) of Elmore Leonard’s classic crime novel, Out of Sight (1998), with George Clooney, Ving Rhames, and Don Cheadle. For the first, and perhaps only, time, Lopez was able in Out of Sight to combine her skills playing a tough cop (one of her most convincing types) with adult romantic comedy alongside the dashing Clooney, and with a single stroke, she expanded the universe of casting options for Latina female actors.
Although it proved a box-office disappointment, the movie probably has the longest shelf life of any of Jennifer Lopez’s movies. After a vocal performance in the hit animated comedy, Antz (1998), and a co-starring turn in Tarsem Singh’s fantastic art film, The Cell (2000), with Vince Vaughn and Vincent D’Onofrio, Lopez launched a lucrative string of rom-coms, starting with the huge hit comedy, The Wedding Planner (2001), with Matthew McConaughey, tallying a hefty worldwide gross of nearly $95 million.
Despite the commercial success, Jennifer Lopez earned her first of several Razzie Award nominations as Worst Actress. Other rom-coms included hits like Maid in Manhattan (2002), with Ralph Fiennes and Natasha Richardson, and Peter Chelsom’s Shall We Dance? (2004), with Richard Gere, and Monster-in-Law (2005), with Jane Fonda; as well as box-office disasters like Martin Brest’s Gigli (2003), with Ben Affleck, frequently ranked among the worst movies ever made, and inconsequential entertainments such as the dreadful Mark Anthony vanity project, El Cantante (2006), What to Expect When You’re Expecting (2012), with Cameron Diaz and Elizabeth Banks, and action dramas like Parker (2013), with Jason Statham, and Peter Segal’s Second Act (2018), with Leah Remini and Vanessa Hudgens.
Requiring a serious boost to the movie side of her robust career (including multiple platinum recordings as a singer), Jennifer Lopez brought to the screen as producer-star in the Wild and Wooly true-crime thriller, Hustlers (2019), with Constance Wu, Julia Stiles, Keke Palmer, Lizzo and Cardi B, scoring rave reviews, a worldwide box office total of $158 million and a score of industry and critical organization nominations and awards.
In 2022, Jennifer Lopez starred in the rom-com Marry Me, with her frequent co-star Owen Wilson; Niki Caro’s thriller, The Mother, with Joseph Fiennes; and the comedy, Shotgun Wedding, with Josh Duhamel, Sonia Braga, Jennifer Coolidge, and Lenny Kravitz.
Lopez was featured in the cast of the wrestling biopic,
Unstoppable (2024), based on Anthony Robles’s 2012 memoir (written with Austin Murphy), with Ben Affleck as lead producer, co-starring Jharrel Jerome, Bobby Cannavale, Michael Pena and Don Cheadle under William Goldenberg’s direction, premiering at the Toronto Film Festival and then released theatrically and on streaming by Amazon MGM Studios. Lopez starred with Tonatiuh and Diego Luna in director/writer
Bill Condon’s feature film version of
Kiss of the Spider Woman (2025), adapted from both Manuel Puig’s 1976 novel and the stage musical by Terrence McNally, John Kander, and Fred Ebb, launching at the Sundance Film Festival and released wide by Lionsgate/Roadside Attractions/LD Entertainment.
Jennifer Lopez was a lead producer and also co-starred with Pierson Fode, Isabel May and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau in the thriller,
The Last Mrs. Parrish (date to be announced), directed by
Robert Zemeckis and produced and released by Netflix, and then Lopez co-starred in and was a lead producer on the biopic about late drug lord Griselda Blanco,
The Godmother (date to be announced), co-written by Terence Winter and Regina Corrado. Lopez was a lead producer on the Puerto Rican-set animation movie,
Bob the Builder (date to be announced), produced and starring
Anthony Ramos and written by
Felipe Vargas.