Jennifer Lopez and Maluma open up about their roles in ‘Marry Me’

Jennifer Lopez and Maluma in "Marry Me". IMDB
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Updated 21 February 2022
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Jennifer Lopez and Maluma open up about their roles in ‘Marry Me’

DUBAI: Film star Jennifer Lopez says she didn’t need to do much research for “Marry Me” as it is very relatable to her life in the spotlight. She was talking to Arab News about her role in the newly released movie.  

US-Puerto Rican Lopez stars with Owen Wilson and Maluma in a romantic comedy about the unlikely marriage between a pop superstar and a math teacher.

She plays Kat Valdez, a singer megastar who discovers her fiancé, played by Maluma, has cheated on her. She decides to marry a stranger (Owen Wilson) onstage at a concert.

“The difficult part was kind of the meta part which was the idea of showing what it’s really like inside my bedroom when something goes wrong and you suffer a heartbreak like this in front of the whole world and the media kind of goes to town on you,” she said.

American romantic comedy veteran Wilson stars alongside Lopez as her romantic interest in the film. The pair have worked together before, the first time being in the 1997 horror movie “Anaconda.”

This is the first live action film for internationally known singer Maluma, who was prompted to take the role by co-star Lopez.

“I didn’t know how it works. It was my first time and then when I was there with Jennifer, she was like, ‘yo, we’re gonna do this. You’re gonna kill it. Just get focused, you know’” She gave me a bunch of advice,” the Colombian-born songwriter said to Arab News. 

Lopez took on the responsibility for the music as it plays a major part in the film. Working alongside the creative team, she sorted through possible songs and chose what would work best for which scenes and characters.

She said: “Picking the songs was such a pleasure for me. And then to have Maluma fill in the blanks for his character — he did such a great job with the two songs that he did. I just felt we really found the characters within those songs.”

Lopez and Maluma joined forces to record songs for the soundtrack, some of which are already hitting top of the music charts.

“Marry Me” is now showing in theaters in Saudi Arabia and the UAE.


Israa Allaf on her Saudi fashion brand The Untitled Project 

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Israa Allaf on her Saudi fashion brand The Untitled Project 

  • ‘It’s a fusion culture that really represents Saudi,’ creative director and founder tells Arab News 

DUBAI: In 2018, when Israa Allaf launched her Saudi fashion brand The Untitled Project, “it was really hard to find something that really represented individuality,” she tells Arab News. “I really wanted to create something unique — something that felt Westernized yet at the same time felt Arab, and that you could wear as a cover-up.” 

At the time, modest fashion often left little room for self-expression. “The abaya, for example, was always worn closed, and we wanted to showcase how you can incorporate it and style it within your own clothing and have something that’s really unique to you, that you really won't find anywhere else,” Allaf says. 

In a Saudi fashion scene that has become increasingly polished and trend-driven, The Untitled Project stands out for its flowing cover-ups, richly layered prints and experimental silhouettes.  

Allaf, who studied marketing, began by designing the pieces herself before stepping into the role of creative director and building a team around her.  

“That’s why you can also see with the designs that we have many different themes. We have different artists from all around the world creating something — it’s a bit more of a fusion culture that really represents Saudi, but shows a different type of craft,” she explains. 

That idea of fluidity is also built into the brand’s name. “I actually came up with the name before even (thinking about starting the company),” Allaf says, adding that she wanted to avoid the rigid associations that come with most labels. “Brand names really put you in a box… and we didn’t want that. A woman has layers. She’s not one thing.”  

That philosophy shapes who she designs for: two main types of women. One who leans into statement pieces, another who dresses according to the occasion. 

Though Allaf is now based in Riyadh, her company’s soul remains deeply tied to Jeddah, especially the city’s beach culture and relaxed aesthetic.  

“In Riyadh, they like to wear their abayas long. In Jeddah, they like to wear them short. They like their slippers. They like their ankle-length pieces, or even shorter pieces, and we really embody the Jeddah girl brand,” Allaf says. “We’d say we’re more colorful — having, like, seven-plus colors in one piece and making it still look beautiful on a woman.”  

Behind every item of The Untitled Project’s clothing — all of which are produced in Saudi Arabia — is a meticulous process that can stretch over months, sometimes focusing on just a single print or a single abaya, Allaf says. Her goal is always to ensure each design reaches its strongest possible version before it is ever released. 

The clothes are created using only silk, linen and cotton, chosen for their natural feel and their ability to showcase the brand’s intricate prints. 

Sustainability is also central to the brand’s identity, with organic materials and a strong focus on reusing fabric. Leftover textiles, embroidery and archived materials from previous collections are redesigned and reworked into new garments, allowing older pieces to take on a new life instead of being discarded. 

Small-batch production supports that approach. “Why make hundreds of a piece when we don’t know the demand? We’ll create a smaller batch and test it out on the market,” says Allaf, adding that doing so leaves “room for experimentation.”  

Even the brand’s packaging is designed with reuse in mind. After customers began repurposing the original boxes — often as makeshift homes for their cats — the brand leaned into the idea, redesigning the packaging to encourage customers to reuse it for storage and everyday needs rather than throwing it away. 

“We intentionally wrote on the backs that they can be cat-house boxes. We wanted the customers to also reuse,” Allaf says.  

One of The Untitled Project’s most meaningful designs is “Scene Leaving the Corniche.”  

“I love it so much. It just looks great on all skin tones. It has symmetry and it has asymmetry as well,” says Allaf. With butterflies, flowers and palm motifs, it captures the brand’s identity.  

“That is going to be the new brand staple print,” she says. “It represents the brand’s personality the best.” 

Through fabric, form and community projects, Allaf continues to push the idea that fashion can be thoughtful, expressive and adaptable — just like the women she designs for.