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Jennifer Lopez, 55, flaunts her jaw-dropping physique in a busty silver leotard as she continues to put on a raunchy display during her tour

Jennifer Lopez, 55, flaunts her jaw-dropping physique in a busty silver leotard as she continues to put on a raunchy display during her tour

Daily Mail​4 days ago
She recently hit the headlines for simulating sex on stage during her Up All Night Live Tour which is currently in Europe.
And Jennifer Lopez continued to turn up the heat as she once again put on a raunchy display as her tour hit Mura Storiche, Lucca in Italy on Monday.
The singer, 55, looked incredible as she slipped her jaw-dropping figure into a busty silver leotard as she performed alongside her scantily-clad dancers.
The risqué high-cut ensemble featured padded shoulders and a plunging neckline, perfectly showcasing the star's gym-honed body.
JLo added fishnet stockings and thigh-high silver boots to her racy look and looked on fine form as she strutted about the stage.
At one point, the stunner added to her look with a fringed jacket and bejewelled hat, before the two were removed as the hitmaker pulled off her energetic dance moves.
It comes shortly after JLo shocked with her X-rated performance that saw her simulate sex positions on stage at the Cook Music Fest in Tenerife.
She once again left little to the imagination, this time in a thong bodysuit complete with racy cut outs.
Jennifer sung on all fours in front of one shirtless dancer, before another lifted her off her feet and she sat on his shoulder with her crotch in his face.
Another eye-popping moments saw her straddling one dancer while placing her hands between the legs of another two.
The hunky men showcased their gym honed physiques in only trousers and white corsets.
The sizzling show comes after she debuted her Ben Affleck revenge song, saying earlier this week: 'This is a song that is a new song that I want to sing for the first time tonight that came to me when I was up all night one night. Shall we sing this one for the people?'.
JLO —who first sang the song at a private fan event July 2—said she's 'better' now.
'The love I want, the love I need, it starts in me,' she sang.
The star looked incredible in her skimpy silver bodysuit as she took to the stage in Italy
At one point, the stunner added to her look with a fringed jacket and bejewelled hat
She then added, 'Now I found my way here I'm gonna stay there. Thank you for the scars you left on my heart, was showing me that stars shine brighter in the dark. I won't fall apart because of who we are, but your broken parts.'
And she said the heartbreak made her 'wiser.'
'Because of you, I am stronger, wiser,' Lopez belted out. 'Better than I've ever been.'
Then Jennifer made it very clear she would never reunite with Ben: 'I won't let you no longer, longer, ever say goodbye to me. It was perfect while you made me believe, really got only greater for me, and it made me stronger, stronger, bulletproof. Now watch me climb out of the wreckage of you.'
She then thanked the unnamed ex for 'the pain that you caused.'
In May Jennifer told El Pais that the split was a 'difficult time' but she would be stronger for it. 'I'm proud of myself for that and I'm proud that I was able to navigate my children through difficult times, that they're stronger and better because of it.'
Jennifer and Ben tied the knot in 2022 after rekindling their romance.
But in August 2024, she filed for divorce on their second wedding anniversary.
A statement obtained by DailyMail.com at the time read: 'Representatives for Live Nation announced today that the Jennifer Lopez US Summer 2024 Tour THIS IS ME...LIVE is canceled.
'Jennifer is taking time off to be with her children, family and close friends,' it was added.
Lopez herself also said she was 'heartsick and devastated' over the cancellation but added it was 'absolutely necessary.'
An insider also told DailyMail.com, 'She's taking time off to be with family and close friends. This was a very difficult decision made by Jennifer this week and she's sorry to her fans.'
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Ozzy Osbourne's 'uncensored' final autobiography to be published months after death - with wife Sharon 'set to write emotional foreword'
Ozzy Osbourne's 'uncensored' final autobiography to be published months after death - with wife Sharon 'set to write emotional foreword'

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Ozzy Osbourne's 'uncensored' final autobiography to be published months after death - with wife Sharon 'set to write emotional foreword'

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Lidl to sell £7.99 dupe of £29.50 Marks & Spencer essential that is perfect for summer holidays
Lidl to sell £7.99 dupe of £29.50 Marks & Spencer essential that is perfect for summer holidays

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Lidl to sell £7.99 dupe of £29.50 Marks & Spencer essential that is perfect for summer holidays

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The beautiful spot on my Grand Tour that left me speechless
The beautiful spot on my Grand Tour that left me speechless

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

The beautiful spot on my Grand Tour that left me speechless

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I emerge from Santa Lucia railway station and take a water taxi to Casino di Venezia, the world's oldest casino, founded in 1638. A red carpet runs from the jetty on the Grand Canal to the VIP wing in Ca' Vendramin Calergi, a Renaissance palace once home to Wagner. I store my suitcase at the coat check, pay a £40 entry fee and pass suits of armour before entering a salon of old-world glamour — cut-glass chandeliers, time-softened brocade, Italians in spiffy suits and gowns crowding round green baize. I whip out my phone. 'No pictures,' a doorman snaps ( I've never gambled, but I'm determined to act the part, so I strut to a roulette table and slide into a seat. The croupier looks at me and raises an eyebrow. 'It's my first time,' I say. The croupier raises both eyebrows. I slide my only chip, €100, onto red. • Jack Ling's Grand Tour part one: The most unusual way to see Paris As the ball clatters I feign indifference, adjusting cufflinks I've forgotten to put on. It lands: red. 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She is transforming me into Casanova, the 18th-century Venetian who, like me, gambled, impersonated nobility and was cursed with great beauty. As Hamer snaps me against a veduta-style backdrop, I borrow poses from the nude male model I'd drawn in Rome (from £65; • Jack Ling's Grand Tour part three: A novel way to see Rome I reluctantly peel off the costume afterwards. Some Grand Tourists never did — swallowing up young aristocrats, Venice once spat out 'macaroni', the sneering nickname for those who returned to Britain in foppish Italian dress. This polyester patrician is about to be humbled. I've been invited for espresso with the author and hostess Servane Giol, an expert on Venice who has offered to point me towards its lesser-known places. Buzzed through an unmarked door near Ponte dell'Accademia, I enter a palazzo of stone walls washed in chiaroscuro light. We sit on a terrace above the canal, my Casanova photo tucked away in my pocket like a filthy secret. • 18 of the best hotels in Venice I'm asked about my travels by Giol, who is cultivated and graceful, so everything a Grand Tourist aspires to become. I admit that I'm exhausted by all the prancing and vice. 'Go to San Lazzaro degli Armeni,' she says, her voice smooth as Murano glass (it's an island monastery in the lagoon where Lord Byron went to scrub his soul clean). We finish our drinks and I bottle a courtly hand-kiss as I leave. The next morning I board a violin on water: a 1970s mahogany speedboat (tours from £520 for eight; The city retreats as my driver, Matteo, opens the throttle. Ahead, a bell tower points heavenward, a mute promise of absolution. 'Welcome to Byron island!' Matteo chirps. For once I'm speechless, overwhelmed by the beauty of it all. I step into water-lapped stillness — a monastery of Istrian stone cloistered among gently swaying palm trees. Monks in black cassocks drift through sun-scorched arches next to a garden where roses are grown for jam. I follow them towards the onion-domed campanile, entering a chapel of blue tilework and stained glass. Standing at the altar, I feel so spiritually awake that I might start speaking in tongues — or Armenian, which Byron studied here for six months in 1816 with the monks, Mekhitarists who have lived on the island since a Venetian decree in 1717. The poet's stay threatened to reform him, inspiring what he called 'conviction that there is another, better world, even in this life' (tours £9pp; +39 0415260104). *24 of the best things to do in Venice I return to the moor pier as night falls like a velvet curtain on my time in Venice. 'Where next?' Matteo asks. 'The railway station, please,' I answer. 'Then onwards to Vienna.' Tourists waiting for the vaporetto lift their phones as we pull away. I consider bowing, but the moment has passed. This article contains affiliate links that will earn us revenue Jack Ling was a guest of Byway, which has ten nights' B&B from £2,423pp, including rail travel from the UK ( and Hotel Excelsior, which has room-only doubles from £378 (

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