WhenJennifer Lopezset out to be an actress, she wanted to make sure she represented more of her culture in big movies.Lopez, who has earned raved reviews for her performance inHustlers, is part ofThe Hollywood Reporter‘s latest actress roundtablealongsideLaura Dern,Lupita Nyong’o,Awkwafina,Scarlett JohanssonandRenée Zellweger.With such a diverse panel, the women were asked if Hollywood has become more inclusive over their years in the industry.“When I first started, one of the things that I wanted to do, because I was Puerto Rican, Latina, was that I wanted to be in romantic comedies because I felt like all the women in romantic comedies always looked the same way, they were always white,” Lopez, 50, explained of her own fight to make change happen.Columbia Pictures/Everett Collection“And I was like, if I can do it and just show that I’m every girl — because I am the hopeless romantic, I am that — I am the single working woman, I was those things. And I remember thinking, I need to be the lead in a romantic comedy. And that’s one of the things I went for and that’s one of the things me and my agents talked about,” she continued.“That’s the thing — when the race of the person in the romantic comedy is not the point,” Nyong’o agreed with Lopez. “There are moments when the cultural group or the religious group or the national group is the subject matter, and there are moments when it’s not, and both are radical, you know?”Lopez went on to star in iconic romantic comedies likeMaid in Manhattan(2002),Jersey Girl(2004) andThe Wedding Planner(2001), while Nyong’o starred in Jordan Peele’s latest horror hitUs, featuring a black family in a genre that has largely centered around white characters.

WhenJennifer Lopezset out to be an actress, she wanted to make sure she represented more of her culture in big movies.

Lopez, who has earned raved reviews for her performance inHustlers, is part ofThe Hollywood Reporter‘s latest actress roundtablealongsideLaura Dern,Lupita Nyong’o,Awkwafina,Scarlett JohanssonandRenée Zellweger.

With such a diverse panel, the women were asked if Hollywood has become more inclusive over their years in the industry.

“When I first started, one of the things that I wanted to do, because I was Puerto Rican, Latina, was that I wanted to be in romantic comedies because I felt like all the women in romantic comedies always looked the same way, they were always white,” Lopez, 50, explained of her own fight to make change happen.

Columbia Pictures/Everett Collection

Justin Chambers, Jennifer Lopez, Frances Bay

“And I was like, if I can do it and just show that I’m every girl — because I am the hopeless romantic, I am that — I am the single working woman, I was those things. And I remember thinking, I need to be the lead in a romantic comedy. And that’s one of the things I went for and that’s one of the things me and my agents talked about,” she continued.

“That’s the thing — when the race of the person in the romantic comedy is not the point,” Nyong’o agreed with Lopez. “There are moments when the cultural group or the religious group or the national group is the subject matter, and there are moments when it’s not, and both are radical, you know?”

Lopez went on to star in iconic romantic comedies likeMaid in Manhattan(2002),Jersey Girl(2004) andThe Wedding Planner(2001), while Nyong’o starred in Jordan Peele’s latest horror hitUs, featuring a black family in a genre that has largely centered around white characters.

source: people.com