Subscriber Account active since. Written by Tina Fey and starring Lindsay Lohan as Cady and Rachel McAdams as Regina, the film continues to grow in popularity as new generations discover its humor and relate to its depiction of high-school drama. And even though you know which day the Plastics wear pink Wednesday, obviously , read on for 13 things you may not know about "Mean Girls. For example, the quote in the Burn Book about Amber D'Alessio making out with a hot dog was originally about a frozen hot dog and involved something much more explicit than making out. The ratings board took issue with the sexual humor and with the fact that the hot dog was frozen, so the line was rewritten.

Hallmark announces Christmas movie with LGBTQ plot starring Jonathan Bennett



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The Africa-to-Chicago suburbs transplant, embodied by Lindsay Lohan in the film, will be played by Erike Henningsen on stage. Taylor Louderman is playing the notorious teen queen on Broadway — the role originated by Rachel McAdams on the big screen. Louderman's got quite a resume when it comes to film-to-musical adaptations: She starred in the Bring It On musical, as well as in a St. Louis production of Legally Blonde. Ashley Park will be bringing Lacey Chabert's character to life on stage. Lizzy Kaplan's character is getting a bit of a makeover in the musical adaptation: Her last name will be Sarkisian, not Ian. Barrett Wilbert Weed, who starred in the musical version of another teen-favorite film, Heathers , and nabbed a Drama Desk nomination, will play the newly-renamed part.


Mean Girls
How to help people impacted by the weather crisis in Texas. Can't get enough of Netflix's book-to-film adaptations? You're in luck because the streaming service just released "Moxie," a new movie based off a popular young adult novel with the same name.



From Euphoria to Moxie, a new generation of films and shows are tackling thorny issues while bringing diversity and political awareness to the halls of high school. Unshackled from box office expectations and conventional wisdom, streaming services, with their near-bottomless wells of cash, have made a virtual cottage industry of the once-flatlined teen movie. But its base unit remains the comedy set in a suburban high school. These films were popular, enjoyable, and remain, for many, beloved; they also focused overwhelmingly on straight, white characters, and are laced with casual homophobia or sexism.