TIME magazine prefers to be diplomatic and doesn’t rank its list of the 100
Most Influential People in the World, which was announced today. But let’s be
frank: in the world of entertainment, Jennifer Lawrence is nonpareil. The
22-year-old Oscar winner and star of the Hunger Games blockbuster franchise was
lauded by none other than Jodie Foster, her director from The Beaver and one of
the few actresses to attain Lawrence’s critical and popular success — and more
importantly, know how to translate it into real influence.
“Sure, this girl can act. But, man, this girl can also just be,” Foster
wrote, describing seeing early cuts of Lawrence’s Oscar-nominated performance in
Winter’s Bone. “All of those painful secrets in her face, the feeling that
there’s some terrible past that’s left impossibly angled bone and weariness in
its wake. She’s worn from the pain of living — something none of her characters
would ever have the energy to articulate. It’s just part of her, like skin and
muscle. The good news is that Jen, her good-humored, ballsy, free-spirited alter
ego with the husky voice and a propensity for junk food … Jen, the spritely
tomboy from Kentucky — that Jen’s got it together. A hoot. A gem. A gem with a
killer stare.”
Click below for a few of the other entertainment figures who made TIME’s
list, with the tributes penned by admiring celebrities.
Beyoncé — “She’s gone beyond being a popular singer, even beyond being a
pop-cultural icon. When Beyoncé does an album, when Beyoncé sings a song, when
Beyoncé does anything, it’s an event, and it’s broadly influential. Right now,
she is the heir-apparent diva of the USA — the reigning national voice.” — Baz
Luhrmann
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Jimmy Fallon — “Picture this: I’m in the heart of an impromptu speech at my
wedding reception in front of 150 guests, pouring it out to my lovely new bride.
You could hear a pin drop. I paused for just a moment in between thoughts. And
then there was Jimmy, shouting a joke from his seat, sparking an improv between
the two of us that went on for a good five or 10 minutes and had all our guests
roaring with laughter. Interrupting the groom’s speech at the wedding reception?
Cracking jokes when your buddy is looking desperately for the words to say that
he hopes his wife will remember forever? It turned into a moment that everyone
there will remember forever. Anyone else would have bombed on that stage. And
then I would have kicked their ass. But this was Jimmy Fallon. He just can’t
help himself.” — Justin Timberlake
Lena Dunham — “Hannah is as vivid and raw a portrait as we have seen —
nails bitten to the nub — and despite her glaring faults, we ravenously embrace
her. Lena’s unique lack of vanity or shame allows us to consider that we may
also be able to accept and express ourselves fully. This is not only impressive,
it’s important. Because it turns out that girls don’t just want to have fun.
They also want to be known for who they really are.” — Claire Danes
Justin Timberlake — “His star power comes from the fact that he sounds like
he’s having fun when he makes music, and he can read a song—meaning as a singer
or songwriter you can feel the emotion. You think, I can relate to that or I
believe in that, and then the listener can feel it too. When Justin reads a song
like “Cry Me a River” or “Suit & Tie,” you become part of that emotion.” —
Stevie Wonder
Mindy Kaling — “Mindy Kaling embodies the trifecta of being brilliant,
wonderful and hilarious. Because that is statistically impossible, it can mean
only one thing: she was created by an evil scientist to lull us into a giddy
stupor in order to control our minds.” — Ed Helms
Jimmy Kimmel — “He can interview a major star and be impressed and still
cut the star down to human size with the deftness of a brain surgeon. He is the
stand-up guy that young male viewers want as their pal late at night. He
projects it because he is it.” — Ben Stein
Shonda Rhimes — “Shonda is a storyteller for our times. Courageous in her
approach to the work, she’s never played by other people’s rules. Eight years
ago, she introduced us to Grey’s Anatomy with an African-American chief of
surgery and an Asian character with leading plotlines. Gay, straight, single,
divorced, lost, searching — everybody gets a seat at Shonda’s table.” — Oprah
Winfrey
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