What Jennifer Lopez's Scientology story can teach us about friendship
If you’ve read Lawrence Wright’s bestselling Scientology exposé Going Clear, or watched the HBO documentary based on the book, you won’t be surprised by many of the disturbing anecdotes in ex-Scientologist Leah Remini’s new book, Troublemaker: Surviving Hollywood and Scientology. Not the account of the time the King of Queens actress recalls being thrown off a motorboat by a senior member of the Sea Org—a religious order within the church that is comprised of “the singularly most dedicated Scientologists.” Not the description of a culture in which children are expected to work full days and study Scientology instead of going to school, and where innocent sexual encounters between teens marks them as sexually aberrant. Not the detailed account of what it was like to interact with Scientology’s star member, Tom Cruise, or witness his 2006 wedding to Katie Holmes.
Remini’s book offers up few new allegations against the church. But it does give us a fascinating look at the friendship Remini has with a celebrity who is not typically associated with Scientology: Jennifer Lopez.
Though Lopez wasn’t herself brought up in Scientology, her father is a Scientologist. And for years, she publicly defended the organization against its detractors. She said in a 2007 TV interview that garnered national attention:
… it’s funny the way people come at [Scientology]. To me it’s so strange. These are some of the best people I’ve ever met in my life. You know, they’re just lovely, genuine people. The way they ask is such a, ‘Uh, are you [a Scientologist]?’ It’s such a negative thing and I just don’t see it that way.” She continued, “My dad has been a Scientologist for 20 years. He’s the best man that I know in my life and so, it’s weird to me that people want to paint it in a negative way.
Now, Remini credits Lopez with helping her leave Scientology. And, in some ways, the more interesting (and telling) story contained in Remini’s memoir is about Lopez’s shift from publicly defending Scientology to being the BFF of an apostate. It’s a portrait of a friendship that was tested at many points, and that might have ended over a religious schism, but that ultimately held together despite their differences.
In Troublemaker, Remini describes Lopez and her ex-husband Marc Anthony as close friends. She first discusses her relationship with the couple in the context of Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes’ wedding:
Tom… then asked if we wanted to invite our friends Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony to the wedding. “Don’t you think you guys should?” I asked, confused. “Well, we don’t really know them that well,” Katie said. Right, I thought, exactly my point. And you want to invite them to the wedding?
According to Remini, this wasn’t the first time she had been asked to invite the power couple to events with Cruise and Holmes, but that she’d previously “assumed [Katie] was a fan of J-Lo.”