Jenn bares all under a sheer lace red dress to top the magazine’s A-list cover list
Jennifer Lopez is stunning in a series of photos where she models some very powerful looks. She graces the cover of ELLE’s Women In Hollywood issue.
The 54-year-old businesswoman, mother, singer, and actress talked about how “women get sexier as they get older” and hinted that she “may work until she is 90.”
For one stunning picture, Jennifer, also known as J-Lo, posed nude beneath a semi-sheer red lace dress with a plunging detail at the front.
In addition, she donned a gold lamé one-shoulder dress to grace the magazine’s cover alongside celebrities like Jodie Foster, America Ferrera, Eva Longoria, and Taraji P. Henson, to mention a few.
Jennifer commented, “People have realized that women just get sexier as they get older.” in reference to the rise in roles for older women.
They become more intelligent and endowed with greater character. All of that is incredibly lovely and appealing, not only on the outside but also within—the beauty you acquire with age and the knowledge you acquire.
“I see myself working [as long as] I want to,” she said. What age that is, I have no idea. I’m not sure, but it could be 70, 80, or even 90.
However, I am aware that if I want it and want to make it, it is available to me. That has always been my mentality: to never allow anyone to categorize me based on my place of birth, my upbringing, my age, or anything similar.
For the landscape photo, Jennifer wore a red plunging leotard and a sheer red fabric across her body, which looked amazing.
Along with several sultry designer gowns, she also wore a bold black gown that exposed a large keyhole at the cleavage.
Jennifer acknowledged in the interview that there were some things she wished she had known before becoming well-known in Hollywood.
“One of those things was to be more specific with my choices,” the woman stated. And as a Latina, I was denied that luxury.
Not every incident that would have prompted a call from someone who wasn’t Latina did so for me. I was called in relation to very specific matters.