Enrique Iglesias & Jennifer Lopez Tour

Following the announcement, music publication Billboard reported Lopez was in talks to conduct a co-headlining tour with Enrique Iglesias.

[4] The rumors became official as Lopez announced the joint tour on "On Air with Ryan Seacrest", April 30, 2012.

Further details reveal famed tour director Jamie King will direct the show alongside Lopez's current boyfriend Casper Smart.

[12]Lopez's set opened with a "JLO" style curtain; with male dancers dressed in grey tuxedos, top hats, and canes dancing in front of it.

The curtain drops, revealing an "old" Hollywood-themed dance and video sequence, set to her song "Never Gonna Give Up".

Lopez said: "I'm a simple girl from New York City — the Bronx" before performing "Jenny from the Block", "I'm Real", "All I Have" and "Ain't It Funny (Murder Remix)".

After a short break which featured a video clip of Lopez and Beau Smart, her boyfriend at the time, playing peak-a-boo set to her song "Baby I Love You!

It was followed by an old-school performance of "Hold It, Don't Drop It", which featured Lopez's intentional comedic refusal to leave the stage.

He then emerged in jeans and a t-shirt, opening with "Tonight (I'm Lovin' You)"; he sung the song through auto-tuned vocals.

before switching the lyrics to the explicit version of the song Tonight (I'm Fuckin' You); this is followed by "I Like How It Feels", before performing "Dirty Dancer" with visual assistance via technology from Usher.

[13][14][15] A writer from the Montreal Gazette gave the opening night of the tour a positive review, saying that Lopez won by "showering everyone with riches" while Iglesias scored a "partial partial victory by paying attention to the faces in the crowd"—however, did criticizer the fact that Lopez's set went first, and said that "Both artists would have benefited if their 70- to 80-minute sets had been flipped: Iglesias wouldn’t have been eclipsed by Lopez pulling out all the stops, and Lopez would have had the glory of the big show-ending moment rather than the glory of the big pre-bathroom-break moment.