January Jones Looks Stunning
January Jones has a great sense of style when she's not working! On Monday, the actress came to Instagram to offer an update on her weekend, but it was her dazzling look that drew the most attention.
January, 44, posted a mirror picture in which she posed with one hand on her head. She is dressed in a cropped denim jacket that is barely buttoned at the top, a plunging sheer black blouse, and ripped jeans.
"You're looking fantastic," one admirer said in response. Another user added, "You must have been the prettiest person in the entire world…!!"
It is unknown where January went to high school. She has a kid named Xander, who is just ten years old. The Mad Men star is fiercely protective of her son and has never publicly revealed his father's name. In 2013, she told The New York Times that the information was just her "son's business."
In a 2017 interview with Red, she discussed the advantages of raising Xander around strong women, adding that he was even born in a room with exclusive females.
"I lived with my younger sister and mother while my brother-in-law and father were are neighbors." I just wanted to be among women. "There's a lot of feminine energy. It's beneficial for a man to be surrounded by powerful women."
"To teach him the value of women. He doesn't have a man in his life who tells him, 'don't cry,' or 'you throw like a lady.' All the [expletive] things dads inadvertently do."
January Jones was born in Sioux Falls on January 5, 1978. Karen Sue (née Cox), a sports goods shop manager, and Marvin Roger Jones, a gym instructor, and fitness director, are her parents. She is descended from Czech, Danish, English, Welsh, and German ancestors. She was called after January Wayne, a character in Jacqueline Susann's potboiler novel turned film, Once Is Not Enough (1975).
Even though she did not act in high school and had no training, she received her first taste of acting from TV advertisements and discovered that she had a natural talent for it. January starred in a few television pilots and a cable series before making her big-screen debut in All the Rage (1999), a low-budget independent that never received wide distribution.