
A Bronx-born  actress-singer-dancer of Puerto  Rican descent, Jennifer Lopez quickly  went from a rising starlet to  leading lady, with her sultry,  intelligent eyes, luxuriant wavy hair,  and fluid body of legendary  voluptuousness coming across well on the  big screen. Lopez first won  attention as a "fly girl", one of the  back-up dancers on the Fox  variety series "In Living Color" and went on  to act in several failed  TV series before reaching the big time,  leading in feature film  and  hitting the top of the Billboard charts. This daughter of a  computer  specialist and a kindergarten teacher always wanted to perform  and  began taking dance lessons at an early age. Lopez later danced in  the  European tour of "Golden Musicals of Broadway", in the chorus  behind  Hinton Battle in the Japanese tour of "Synchronicity" and in  numerous  music videos and TV variety specials. While she made her film  debut  in "My Little Girl" (1986), her real showbiz break did not come  until  she beat out 2,000 other aspirants, impressing choreographer  Rosie  Perez, and landing a spot in the chorus of "In Living Color".  Lopez  stayed with the show from 1991-1993, when she elected to branch  out  into acting. TV roles came quickly, although the vehicles were not  all  that successful. She made her TV-movie debut as a nurse among crash   victims in the dense Mexican jungle in "Nurses on the Line: The Crash   of Flight 7" (CBS, 1993). She went on to portray Melinda Lopez, a   Latina maiden under the watchful eye of her father (Pepe Serna) in the   short-lived CBS series "Second Chances" (1993-94), and repeated the   role in "Hotel Malibu" (1994), an equally unsuccessful revamp of the   former. She also appeared in "South Central" (Fox, 1994), as a   co-worker of star Tina Lifford. In 1994, Lopez even co-hosted "Growing   Up Roses" (CBS), a special recapping the best moments in Tournament of   Roses Parade history. TV proved too small a medium for Lopez,  whose  talent and charisma as well as hypnotic good looks cried out for  the  big screen. Her first feature success came with Gregory Nava's "My   Family/Mi Familia" (1995), which found her cast as the youthful version   of the matriarch of the Mexican-American family, a woman who survived   illegal deportation and near-drowning to return to her husband in Los   Angeles. That same year, she co-starred as the pistol-packing Gloria   Santiago opposite Woody Harrelson and Wesley Snipes in the action   blockbuster "Money Train". In 1996, she was Robin Williams' sympathetic   fifth grade teacher, (a role not specifically written for a Latina) in   "Jack", a fantasy by Francis Ford Coppola that starred Williams as a   ten-year-old whose aging process is drastically accelerated. Lopez was  catapulted to prominence when she was cast in the title role  of  "Selena" (1997), the moving biopic about the beloved slain Tejano   singer. Selena's influential life and tragic death made for a truly   compelling film, and the actress' vibrant, intuitive portrayal set her   apart from her peers and readied her for stardom. With strong reviews   for her turn in the noirish thriller "Blood and Wine", Lopez was poised   for greater things, as evidenced by her casting alongside Nick Nolte   and Sean Penn in Oliver Stone's "U-Turn" (both also 1997). In 1998,   Lopez solidified her leading lady status, starring opposite George   Clooney in Steven Soderbergh's subtly steamy action thriller "Out of   Sight". Displaying a winning sense of humor that added a down-to-earth   charm to her undeniable sultriness, Lopez proved a good fit for   heartthrob Clooney, and the two displayed the kind of onscreen   fireworks that were notably missing in the actor's prior efforts.  Winning        rave reviews for her performance, Lopez was well on her way to   superstardom, and made the most of her fame by releasing her debut   album, a decidedly NYC-flavored dance record entitled "On the 6" after   the subway line that runs from her Bronx home into Manhattan. While the   singles "If You Had My Love" and "Waiting For Tonight" tore up the   charts and pumped out of nightclub speakers, Lopez was enjoying more   screen success as the star of the odd sci-fi thriller "The Cell"   (2000). Directed by famed commercial and music video visionary Tarsem,   the film drew from various art influences, and made up for lagging plot   devices with an sweet dose of eye candy. Lopez outfitted in ornate,   elaborate and futuristic garb pleased audiences, though her courageous   but slightly stilted performance as a child psychologist with a talent   for probing the subconscious was less remarkable. In 2001, she tried   her hand at fluffy romantic comedy, playing "The Wedding Planner" who   quite literally falls for the groom (Matthew McConaughey). Lopez showed   a surprising talent for the sillier side of things, and convincingly   ditched her glamorous image for one of a frazzled workaholic prone to   pratfalls and other embarrassing mishaps. Audiences flocked to the   feel-good comedy, and the final week in January 2001 saw the film as   well as her newly-released album "J.Lo" hit the top of their respective   charts simultaneously. Keeping up her career's positive  momentum,  Lopez starred as a policewoman who falls for Jim Caviezel in  the  romantic thriller "Angel Eyes"(2001). In 2002, Lopez starred in  Michael  Apted's thiller/drama "Enough". In this film, Lopez played an  abused  woman who realized that the only way to escape her abuser (her  husband)  was to kill him. Both "Angel Eyes" and "Enough" performed  wanly at the  box office, but Lopez, who also released the poorly  reviewed but  popular album "This is Me..." in 2002, remained one of the  most  talked-about performers of her generation and a perennial fixture  on  magazine covers and entertainment news shows--a status that went  into  overdrive following her 2002 engagement to actor Ben Affleck. Her  next  film cast her in a mild, "Pretty Woman"-esque Cinderella mode for  "Maid  in Manhattan" (2002), in which she played a housekeeper at a high   class New York hotel who falls for a handsome politician (Ralph Finnes).  Lopez's public profile reached critical mass with the release of   "Gigli" (2003), the mob-based action-comedy on which she first met (and   presumably fell for) Affleck. After months of media hype surrounding   the "Bennifer" relationship, public expectation of an on-screen romance   between Lopez and Affleck was so high, the film was the subject of   extensive reshooting and reconfiguring to accomodate the perceptions,   although Lopez's character was written and initially shot as a   confirmed lesbian. The film, a gangster action-comedy in which Affleck   plays an incompotent mob thug, was the victim of bad buzz for months   before its release and received a critical drubbing--possibly even an   over-harsh response--when it finally hit theaters, giving it almost   "Ishtar"-like bomb status. Lopez continued to exist at the eye of the   media storm when she and Affleck called off their wedding in September   2003 and split for good in early 2004, followed by press reports that   she sought solace with Latin singing sensation Marc Anthony. Meanwhile,  the "Bennifer" backlash was so  intense, the makers of the next  Affleck-Lopez collaboration,  writer-director Kevin Smith's middling  romantic comedy "Jersey Girl"  (2004) extremely downplayed Lopez's  involvement (and indeed, her role  was small and brief, playing  Affleck's doomed wife in the film's  opening sequences). The final  shocker came five months after the  Lopez-Affleck split when Lopez  suddenly married the newly divorced  Anthony in surprise ceremony that  perhaps solidified her off-screen  reputation as the Elizabeth Taylor of  her generation--although the  couple took eight months before officially  confirming their marriage  and refused to discuss it further. In midst of her busy life as a  celebrity, Lopez also continued to make  films: she was paired opposite  Richard Gere as an icy dance instructor  who rediscovers her passions as  she teaches Gere's obsessed family man  how to move across the dance  floor in the romance "Shall We Dance?"  (2004), a role that made great  use of her prowess as a dancer. In 2005  Lopez--who announced that she  preferred it if the media dropped the  "J-Lo" monicker--made headlines  with her live duet with Anthony at the  47th annual Grammy Awards (their  over-the-top, melodramatic performance  of the song "Escapémonos" was  snickered at by critics of her musical ability, though Anthony took home the Grammy for best Latin pop album   for "Amar Sin Mentiras") and she demonstrated her continual   entreprenurial spirit with a new fragrance launch, the debut of her   Sweetface clothing line (which prompted protests from animal activists   due to its use of fur), and a new album, "Rebirth," a return to   club-style dance beats which launched to initially disappointing sales.  Her next film,  the comedy "Monster-In-Law" (2005), pitted her  effectively against  screen legend Jane Fonda (in her first role in 15  years): in the film  Lopez's sweet-natured temp finds the man of her  dreams, only to be  menaced by his meddling, over-protective mother who  hopes to drive her  away. Candy-sweet on the outside at first, Lopez  eventually reveals the  inner steel that made her more than a match for  the icon Fonda. Her  next film, Lasse Halstrom's "An Unfinished Life"  (2005) was released  long after completion due to the complexities of  the restructuring of  Miramax following the departure of Bob and Harvey  Weinstein, and while  Lopez generally recieved good notices for her role  as a widowed mother  in an abusive relationship who seeks shelter with  her estranged  father-in-law (Robert Redford), The actress also  developed and  executive produced the TV series "South Beach" (UPN, 2005  - ), an  ensemble drama about three young adults whose dreams and  aspirations  lead them to Miami. She next was set to star in "Bridge and  Tunnel"  (lensed 2006), a romantic comedy in which she played a stock  trader who  depends on a suburban teen who day-trades on his home  computer. 
 
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar