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  1. Laurie Strode is a character from the Halloween series. She first appeared in Halloween (1978) as a high school student who becomes targeted by serial killer Michael Myers, in which she was portrayed by Jamie Lee Curtis. Created by John Carpenter and Debra Hill, Laurie appeared in nine of thirteen films in the series (and is seen briefly in ...

  2. 99+ Videos. 99+ Photos. Jamie Lee Curtis was born on November 22, 1958 in Los Angeles, California, the daughter of legendary actors Janet Leigh and Tony Curtis. She got her big break at acting in 1978 when she won the role of Laurie Strode in Halloween (1978). After that, she became famous for roles in movies like Trading Places (1983), Perfect ...

    • January 1, 1
    • 1.70 m
    • Los Angeles, California, USA
    • “To Have That Kind of Complete Character Was Exciting For me.”
    • “Jamie Had A Quality About her.”
    • “We Went to J. C. Penney and Bought Back-To-School Clothes For This Girl.”
    • “She Did Smoke Pot… Which Was Such An Anomaly For A Good Girl”
    • “The Audience Was Let in on Her Vulnerability from The Very beginning.”
    • “Just Go Over The Bannister and Hold onto This Rope – You’Ll Be Fine.”
    • “There’s 1978 Halloween and 40 Years Later – That’S it.”
    • “She Was The Freak. She’S The Girl Who survived. She’S The Final Girl.”

    Jamie Lee Curtis: “I had done a TV series prior to Halloween. But I was one of 13 or 14 regulars on a half-hour, one-camera TV show. If I had two lines a week, that was a lot. All I remember about Halloweenwas that it was a script where every single page had the name ‘Laurie’ on it. What I knew was that it was a big part. To have something where it...

    John Carpenter:“We picked a scene in the script and she read it, and she had a quality about her. There was an innocence and yet a strength going on in there, and I really liked it. Plus, the girl I wanted for the part had turned me down – so Jamie was perfect!”

    Curtis: “I remember meeting with the costume woman, talking about Laurie, and we went to J. C. Penney and we basically bought back-to-school clothes for this girl. It was like going shopping with Laurie’s mother. There was that skirt, then there was the turtle neck, and then the little cardigan sweater, and the thigh-high big socks. I’d had a perm ...

    Curtis: “[She] was the archetype that had to be the center of that story, which is an innocent girl, without boyfriends, without experience. She’s the good girl, even though she did smoke pot, which is such an anomaly for a good girl. But the way she smokes it, you can see she’s not experienced. She coughs and she sort of blows it.” (Photo by © Com...

    Curtis: “The movie was conceived as The Babysitter Murders. Moustapha Akkad went to John Carpenter and said, ‘I wanna make a movie about babysitters who get slashered.’ It was John and Debra who set it on Halloween night. I think it was Debra who said, ‘Let’s have it take place on Halloween night.’ It’s really the innocence of babysitting coming in...

    Carpenter:“I love everything about [Curtis’ performance as Laurie]. She was so game about everything. I tell her to do something – ‘Okay, go over the banister and just hold onto this rope. You’ll be fine…’ – and she’d do it! And she was just great at it. And she could produce all the emotions that were necessary. She was just a joy to work with. [L...

    Curtis: “What was so beautiful about the first movie is it was complete. You can’t kill the bogeyman. It was the bogeyman – [and] as a matter of fact, it was. What’s beautiful about the new movie is that it just literally slices away all of those other movies. They exist, you can watch them, you can love them or hate them. [But with the new movie] ...

    Curtis: “Now we get to really look at what happened to Laurie Strode 40 years later, to the day, with no attachment. She lost everything. She lost herself, she lost her friends, nobody was helping her. Everybody was saying, ‘Oh, just get on with your life.’ Of course, that didn’t happen, so then the cascading trauma, like a tumbleweed, just gets bi...

  3. Halloween: Directed by David Gordon Green. With Jamie Lee Curtis, Judy Greer, Andi Matichak, James Jude Courtney. Laurie Strode confronts her long-time foe, Michael Myers, the masked figure who has haunted her since she narrowly escaped his killing spree on Halloween night four decades ago.

    • (171K)
    • Crime, Drama, Horror
    • David Gordon Green
    • 2018-10-19
  4. In this town, Michael Myers is a myth. He's the Boogeyman. A ghost story to scare kids. But this Boogeyman is real. An evil like his never stops, it just grows older. Darker. More determined. Forty years ago, he came to my home to kill. He killed my friends, and now he's back to finish what he started, with me.

  5. "It was the Boogeyman..." ―Laurie Strode to Samuel Loomis after he shoots Michael[src] Laurie Strode is a character and the primary protagonist in the Halloween franchise. She first appeared in the original Halloween. Laurie's history is complicated by the fact that the series follows several conflicting continuities. Halloween H20: Twenty Years Later and Halloween: Resurrection ignore the ...

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  7. Halloween is a 2018 American slasher film directed by David Gordon Green, and co-written by Green, Jeff Fradley and Danny McBride. It is the eleventh installment in the Halloween film series and a sequel to the 1978 film of the same name, while disregarding all previous sequels. [ 5 ] The film stars Jamie Lee Curtis who reprises her role as ...

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