jennifer lopez
Jennifer Lopez is an idealist and an actress--one of Puerto
Rican descent--who is convinced she can transcend the stereotypes
mainstream Hollywood tends to attach to her heritage. Interestingly
enough, Jennifer Lopez also is a realist and an actress who,
through her idealism and hard work, actually has managed to
transcend those very stereotypes to personify such diverse characters
as an Apache Indian, a Cuban jewel thief and a Tejano singing
sensation. Her credits range from being a "fly girl"
on In Living Color to a transit cop in Money Train . "You
have to be able to change your voice," says Lopez, who
steps into the pop music limelight this month with her starring
role in Warner Bros' Selena. The musical biopic covers the short,
but dynamic, life and career of the top-selling Tejano singer
who was gunned down by an unstable member of her own entourage.
"Selena was a Texas girl and a Mexican, but she had a strong
Texas twang and didn't have a Spanish accent like some people
think."
And though Selena's own voice is used in the movie's
concert sequences--a condition on which the artist's father
sold the rights to the film--Lopez was eager to speak in a cadence
that would meld with Selena's singing tone. "I didn't have
to sing in the movie, but I learned how to sing her songs her
way, Selena's way. I lip synced to her songs but it appears
I'm singing because I am singing. You just can't hear my voice."
But, despite the fact that Lopez is virtually a lock for the
part--even when it comes to the physical resemblance--the role
didn't come easily, Lopez reflects. She had to endure a grueling
audition even though she had worked with Selena director Gregory
Nava on the film My Family. "Gregory knows me and knows
I can act," the actress says with unabashed confidence.
"But I auditoned and screen-tested for the role. It was
an intense test and the hardest audition I ever went through.
I had to do two songs as Selena and perform them as she did.
And I had to perform five scenes. I got there at six in the
morning and left at five in the afternoon."
And then Lopez, who was perfecting her Apache
accent in Stray Dogs, nearly lost the part due to a scheduling
conflict. "I was working until August and they wanted to
begin filming in June," she says. "But they decided
to wait for me, and that costs a lot of money. Plus, my fee
at this time is a lot of money. So I was happy that in the end
that they decided to go with me." Once she began working
on Selena, Lopez chose to disappear into the role and allow
the memory of the singer to shine in the spotlight. "I
wasn't interested in putting my own stamp on the performance--not
in this case," Lopez says. "Maybe if Selena had died
50 years ago. But being that she was so fresh in her public's
mind, I knew that the movie had to be true to her, and that
it wasn't about me trying to become a star in the role. It was
important for me to really get the essence of why she was so
wonderful, why she was so important in our community, and why
she touched the hundreds of thousands of people who mourned
her death." Lopez hopes to touch her own audience with
her forthcoming performance alongside Ice Cube in April'sAnaconda.
Next up is Oliver Stone's film noir thriller Stray Dogs, and
she recently appeared in Bob Rafelson's Blood & Wine opposite
Jack Nicholson.
Actress/singer Jennifer Lopez was born in the
Bronx, NY on July 24, 1970; after starting out in musical theatre
as a child, at age 16 she made her film debut in the little-seen
My Little Girl, but her career then stalled until she was tapped
to become one of the dancing "Fly Girls" on the television
sketch comedy series In Living Color. A recurring role on the
TV drama Second Chances followed before Lopez was thrust into
the limelight co-starring with Wesley Snipes and Woody Harrelson
in the 1995 feature film Money Train; smaller roles in pictures
including My Family/Mi Familia, Jack and Blood and Wine followed
before she landed the title role in 1997's Selena, portraying
the slain Tejano singer. Co-starring opposite George Clooney
in 1998's acclaimed Out of Sight, Lopez (the product of a Puerto
Rican family) became the highest-paid Latina actress in Hollywood
history; the following summer, she returned to her musical roots
with her debut pop album On the 6, scoring a major hit with
the infectious single "If You Had My Love." ~ Jason
Ankeny, All Music Guide. Then-boyfriend Ojani Noa proposed to
Jennifer at the wrap party for "Selena" by grabbing
a microphone in the middle of the dance floor and presenting
her with a large diamond ring. She accepted.
Born and raised in New York, Lopez considers herself
a Puetro Rican. Is probably best recognized as one of the Fly
Girls on the hit comedy show In Living Color. After two seasons
on one of television's hottest sitcoms, she got a chance to
display her acting abilities in CBS's Second Chances co-starring
Connie Selleca and Megan Fallows. Although Second Chances only
aired for one season, Lopez's character (Melinda Lopez) was
so popular, it was continued on Aaron Spelling's series, Malibu
Road. Lopez was also seen as a recurring character on FOX's
South Central, where she portrayed Lucy, who worked in the co-op
market.
Jennifer Lopez stars in her first major role as
Grace Santiago, a New York City transit cop in the movie Money
Train. Jennifer's most recent project includes New Line Cinema's
My Family, a compelling story produced by Francis Ford Coppola
about the lives of Mexican immigrants in Los Angeles from the
1930s to the present. Lopez's stage background includes performing
Synchronicity in Japan with dancer/singer/choreographer Hinton
Battle, performing the Golden Musicals of Broadway on a European
tour, along with appearances in regional productions of Oklahoma
and Jesus Christ Superstar. Jennifer costars in Jack, a comedy
directed by Francis Ford Coppola and starring Robin Williams
as a ten-year-old oby who falls for his Latina schoolteacher.