Jennifer Lopez Gushes About Being 'Beautiful' and 'Joyful' Following Tour Conclusion

'I love all of you,' she said.

August 16, 2025
Jennifer Lopez Gushes About Being 'Beautiful' and 'Joyful' Following Tour Conclusion
Photo by Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic

Jennifer Lopez capped a busy summer on the road with a clear update on where she is now.

After a 2024 that included a separation from Ben Affleck and a canceled tour, the 56-year-old returned to the stage in 2025 with her Up All Night Live run and closed the final show this week with a message of gratitude.

“Last night was our final show of the summer, and I want to thank every single one of you who came out,” Jennifer Lopez wrote on Instagram. “This was the most beautiful, happy, and free summer…and my only wish is that you feel as joyful as you made me feel every night. I love you.”

Earlier this summer, Jennifer Lopez previewed that same energy while laying out her plans with PEOPLE. “I’m excited to tour - I’m excited first to go do Pride, I’m super excited about that,” she said. “I’m working on that show right now too as we speak and crafting the tour as well. I’m excited to get back out there.”

Summing up the season, she added, “It seems like a perfect summer to celebrate being free and being happy,” and, “Just everything in my life right now just feels really healthy and good, and I’m ready to get out there and make people sing and dance and have a good time. That’s always my goal.”

Jennifer Lopez also connected the moment to personal growth. Reflecting on this chapter with Interview Magazine, she said, “I was thinking about this time in my life, and I’m like, ‘That’s not what I thought it was going to turn out like,’” before concluding, “No, this is exactly where I needed to be, to lead me to where I want to go.”

She continued, “Being in a relationship doesn’t define me. I can’t be looking for happiness in other people. I have to have happiness within myself. I used to say I’m a happy person, but was still looking for something for somebody else to fill, and it’s just like, ‘No, I’m actually good.’”