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Jamie Lee Curtis reflects on playing Laurie Strode as new ‘Halloween’ maze honors that legacy

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Universal Studios Hollywood’s Halloween Horror Nights has long celebrated filmmaker, actor, writer and composer John Carpenter and co-writer and producer Debra Hill’s 1978 independent slasher “Halloween.”

The annual event has themed walk-thru attractions after several films within the “Halloween” franchise and the movie’s antagonist, Michael Myers, has certainly become synonymous with the season, HHN creative director and executive producer John Murdy said.

“It would be in my top five, all-time classic horror films,” he said of the original “Halloween” movie. Horror Nights has featured the franchise a total of six times throughout its history and for the 2022 haunting season, event producers went back to the beginning to explore what makes Myers the ultimate bogeyman and actress Jamie Lee Curtis’ Laurie Strode the genre’s most beloved final girl.

“Everyone who saw the first movie embraced Laurie Strode and they’ve carried me for 44 years and I am her and she is me, and I feel that love from the fans,” Curtis said on the red carpet during the Halloween Horror Nights kick off on Sept. 8. The “Halloween” attraction is one of eight interactive experiences guests can explore this year — along with Scarecrow: The Reaping, The Weeknd: After Hours Nightmare, Universal Horror Hotel and more — as the event runs select evenings through Oct. 31.

“Michael Myers is the catalyst, but this is really Laurie’s story,” Curtis continued. She was just 19 years old when she starred in the film and said they spent 17 days filming it, mostly in South Pasadena, and she was paid $8,000, she said. She had no idea the film would become as iconic as it has, let alone that in her 60s she’d reprise the role for three more films, the last of which, “Halloween Ends,” hits theaters on Oct. 14.

“What I’ve tried to do is have integrity about her and her truth,” she said, noting that she was happy when David Gordon Green, the director of the last three “Halloween” movies, gave an honest look at what Strode’s life would be like after becoming a victim of terrible violence in her teens. “She was isolated and afraid and I thought that was a clever way of really acknowledging what all of this really means. She has been brutalized and we show what happens to people who have been brutalized like that. Laurie Strode represents survival to the core.”


Universal Studios Hollywood’s Halloween Horror Nights has long celebrated filmmaker, actor, writer and composer John Carpenter and co-writer and producer Debra Hill’s 1978 independent slasher “Halloween.”

The annual event has themed walk-thru attractions after several films within the “Halloween” franchise and the movie’s antagonist, Michael Myers, has certainly become synonymous with the season, HHN creative director and executive producer John Murdy said.

“It would be in my top five, all-time classic horror films,” he said of the original “Halloween” movie. Horror Nights has featured the franchise a total of six times throughout its history and for the 2022 haunting season, event producers went back to the beginning to explore what makes Myers the ultimate bogeyman and actress Jamie Lee Curtis’ Laurie Strode the genre’s most beloved final girl.

“Everyone who saw the first movie embraced Laurie Strode and they’ve carried me for 44 years and I am her and she is me, and I feel that love from the fans,” Curtis said on the red carpet during the Halloween Horror Nights kick off on Sept. 8. The “Halloween” attraction is one of eight interactive experiences guests can explore this year — along with Scarecrow: The Reaping, The Weeknd: After Hours Nightmare, Universal Horror Hotel and more — as the event runs select evenings through Oct. 31.

“Michael Myers is the catalyst, but this is really Laurie’s story,” Curtis continued. She was just 19 years old when she starred in the film and said they spent 17 days filming it, mostly in South Pasadena, and she was paid $8,000, she said. She had no idea the film would become as iconic as it has, let alone that in her 60s she’d reprise the role for three more films, the last of which, “Halloween Ends,” hits theaters on Oct. 14.

“What I’ve tried to do is have integrity about her and her truth,” she said, noting that she was happy when David Gordon Green, the director of the last three “Halloween” movies, gave an honest look at what Strode’s life would be like after becoming a victim of terrible violence in her teens. “She was isolated and afraid and I thought that was a clever way of really acknowledging what all of this really means. She has been brutalized and we show what happens to people who have been brutalized like that. Laurie Strode represents survival to the core.”

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