George Lopez (born April 23, 1961, Mission Hills, Los Angeles, California, U.S.) is an American comedian, actor, and talk show host known for his effusive stage persona and comically bleak depictions of the Mexican American experience.
Lopez was raised by his maternal grandmother, a factory worker, and her second husband, a construction worker, in the Mission Hills neighbourhood of Los Angeles. His father had left when he was an infant, and his mother remarried and relocated when he was 10 years old. Lopez characterized his upbringing as neglectful and emotionally abusive, topics that he frequently probed in his comedy. After high school, he worked in the factory that had employed his grandmother. Inspired by Latino comic Freddie Prinze, he ultimately decided to pursue comedy.
Lopez worked the stand-up circuit during the 1980s and began appearing on such television programs as Comedy Club (1987) and The Arsenio Hall Show (1989). By the beginning of the next decade, he had broken into film with a role in the comedy Ski Patrol (1990). His first comedy album, Alien Nation, was released in 1996. Lopez continued to support himself through stand-up appearances. His second album, Right Now Right Now, was released in 2001. The next year, he appeared in the stand-up special The Original Latin Kings of Comedy, and in 2003 he released Team Leader, which was nominated for a Grammy Award for best comedy album. He also accepted occasional film roles, notably in the dramas Bread and Roses (2000) and Real Women Have Curves (2002).
After being spotted by a scout from actress Sandra Bullock’s production company, he partnered with her and her team to develop a sitcom featuring a Latino family. Bullock had noticed the paucity of Latino representation on television and sought to fill the void with Lopez’s brand of family-friendly but socially conscious humour. The result was George Lopez (2002–07), which featured Lopez as a version of himself and drew on his life in its depictions of a Mexican American family. Lopez also served as a producer and writer on the show, which was eventually syndicated. He released the album El Mas Chingon (2006; “The Baddest”) and appeared in the stand-up specials George Lopez: America’s Mexican (2007) and George Lopez: Tall, Dark & Chicano (2009). The specials were also released as recordings and both earned him Grammy nominations for best comedy album.
Lopez hosted the talk show Lopez Tonight (2009–11) and the dating show Take Me Out (2012). He appeared in another special, George Lopez: It’s Not Me, It’s You (2012); it was also released as a recording. Lopez played a teacher and voiced several characters in the children’s film The Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl 3-D (2005) and voiced a toucan in the animated comedy Rio (2011) and its 2014 sequel. After starring in the short-lived autobiographical sitcom Saint George (2014), Lopez produced and appeared in the inspirational drama Spare Parts (2015), about a team of Latino students who win a robotics competition. In 2016–17 he starred in another eponymous sitcom, Lopez, which continued in the autobiographical vein of his other television work. The show acknowledged the breakup of his 17-year marriage and his difficulties (because of his wealth) in reconnecting with old friends. Lopez then appeared in El Chicano, a superhero film featuring an all-Latino cast, and the thriller River Runs Red (both 2018). His credits from 2020 included the family comedy Cats & Dogs 3: Paws Unite!, in which he provided the voice of a parrot. In the comedy Walking with Herb (2021), he appeared as a messenger of God. He later cocreated and starred in Lopez vs. Lopez (2022– ), a sitcom that highlights the rocky relationship between a father and daughter (played by his real-life daughter, Mayan Lopez).
Lopez featured in the 2007 PBS documentary Brown Is the New Green: George Lopez and the American Dream, which used his career as a lens through which to examine the commercialization of Latino culture. In 2003 he was among the cohosts of the Emmy Awards ceremony, and in 2003–04 he hosted the Latin Grammy Awards ceremony. He released the book Why You Crying? My Long, Hard Look at Life, Love, and Laughter (written with Armen Keteyian) in 2004.