Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan set to star in Freaky Friday sequel

The 2003 hitFreaky Friday is set for a highly anticipated comeback,after Disney confirmed work was underway for a sequel expected to reunite Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan as the iconic mother-daughter pair they played 20 years ago.

That was in fact the third time Mary Rodgers’ 1972 novel about a sparring mother and daughter who switch bodies had been filmed. The first,in 1976,starred Barbara Harris as the mother and a young Jodie Foster as the daughter. The second,a 1995 telemovie,starred Shelley Long in the older role andTransparent’s Gaby Hoffman in the younger.

Tess Coleman (Jamie Lee Curtis,left) and her daughter,Anna (Lindsay Lohan,right) in Disney’s 2003 hit,Freaky Friday.

Tess Coleman (Jamie Lee Curtis,left) and her daughter,Anna (Lindsay Lohan,right) in Disney’s 2003 hit,Freaky Friday.AP/Ron Batzdorff

But for many millennials and Gen Zs,it is the 2003 version,with Curtis as Tess and Lohan as Anna,that is definitive. And it is likely for those fans – who would belt outUltimatealongside Lohan,and mimick herteenage angst in the hope they too would bag a hunk like Chad Michael Murray – that a belated sequel is reportedly underway.

Though little is yet known about the storyline or when it is expected to hit screens,Curtis and Lohan are both expected to reprise their roles in some form,with writer and producer Elyse Hollander to pen the screenplay.

The 2003 film – directed by Mark Waters and written by Leslie Dixon and Heather Hach – took over $237 million at the global office,according toThe Numbers. That was around $53 million more thanLegally Blonde 2:Red,White&Blondeand around $156 million more thanThe Lizzie McGuire Movie,two other teen comedies also released that year.

Oscar winner Curtistold The New York Timesshe had been continuously questioned about a possible sequel when promoting her horror filmHalloween Endslast year.

“Something really touched a chord,” she said inTimes’ retrospective celebrating the film’s 20th anniversary. “When I came back,I called my friends at Disney and said,‘It feels like there’s a movie to be made’.”

Curtisteased the sequel’s production at the Los Angeles premiere forGlass Onion:A Knives Out Mystery last November,and again at theProducers Guild Awards at the beginning of the year.

Freaky Fridaynostalgia reached fever pitch in February when Curtis shared a photo of herself and Lohan on Instagram,captioned:“It’s Friday. I’m just sayin! Freaky fingers crossed!”

Curtis,64,is arguably the best promotional tool aFreaky Fridayreturn could hope for. The daughter of Hollywood royalty Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh,she has been a beloved household name since making her film debut in John Carpenter’s classic slasherHalloween in 1978.In March,she collected the best supporting actress Oscar for A24’sEverything,Everywhere,All At Once.

Lohan has long been a screen star,too,but her place in the firmament has been rather less constant.

As a child actress,she stole hearts inThe Parent Trapand became a 2000s megastar thanks to the eminently quotableMean Girls. But substance abuse and legal issues,along with a reputation for unreliability on set,derailed her career for many years.

Now 36 and expecting her first child,she has been working on something of a comeback,landing reality TV and stage roles,securing a multipicture deal with Netflix,and starring in the platform’s festive rom-comFalling for Christmas late last year – her first major studio role in more than a decade.

AFreaky reboot could be the icing on the cake for a resurgent Lohan,who also shared her enthusiasm for such a project withThe New York Times,saying both she and Curtis were open to it and were “leaving it in the hands that be”.

“We would only make something that people would absolutely adore,” she added.

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Nell Geraets is a Culture and Lifestyle reporter at The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald.

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