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List of Scream (film series) characters
List of Scream (film series) characters
from Wikipedia

Neve Campbell, David Arquette and Courteney Cox have central roles in the first four films, supporting roles in the fifth film, with only Cox returning for the sixth film, and the three of them appearing again in the seventh film. Jamie Kennedy has a central role in the first two films and an appearance in the third film, and Hayden Panettiere has a central role in the fourth and sixth films, while Melissa Barrera and Jenna Ortega have central roles in the fifth and sixth films.

The American slasher film series Scream features a large cast of characters, many of whom were created by Kevin Williamson with contributions from Wes Craven (who directed the first four installments in the series) and Ehren Kruger (who wrote the third), and subsequently by new writers Guy Busick and James Vanderbilt with contributions from directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, and producer Chad Villella. The series comprises seven films: Scream (1996), Scream 2 (1997), Scream 3 (2000), Scream 4 (2011), Scream (2022), and Scream VI (2023), with Scream 7 (2026) the filming of which has been wrapped.

The series focuses on a succession of murderers who adopt a ghost-like disguise, dubbed Ghostface (voiced by Roger L. Jackson) who taunt and attempt to kill Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell) in the first four films. She is assisted by ambitious news reporter Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox) and police officer Dewey Riley (David Arquette). The fifth and sixth films shift focus to half-sisters Sam and Tara Carpenter (Melissa Barrera and Jenna Ortega) and twin siblings Chad and Mindy Meeks-Martin (Mason Gooding and Jasmin Savoy Brown), referred to as the "Core Four" in the sixth film, while the seventh film will "start from scratch" with regards to its principal cast.[1] Other major recurring characters include film-geek Randy Meeks (Jamie Kennedy), falsely accused Cotton Weary (Liev Schreiber), single mother Judy Hicks (Marley Shelton), and FBI agent Kirby Reed (Hayden Panettiere).

The first four films in the series were directed by Craven and scored by Marco Beltrami. Williamson wrote Scream, Scream 2 and Scream 4, but scheduling commitments meant he could provide only notes for Scream 3, which was written by Ehren Kruger. Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett directed the fifth and sixth films, with writing duties helmed by James Vanderbilt and Guy Busick.[2][3][4][5][6]

Each film provides a motive and grounds for suspicion for several characters, concealing the identity of the true killer or killers until the finale, in which their identities and motivations are revealed.

Cast overview

[edit]
List indicators

This section includes characters who will appear or have appeared in more than two films in the series.

  • An empty grey cell indicates the character was not in the film, or that the character's official presence has not yet been confirmed.
  •  A indicates an appearance through archival footage or audio.
  •  C indicates a cameo role.
  •  M indicates an appearance in onscreen movie footage.
  •  P indicates an appearance in onscreen photographs.
  •  U indicates an uncredited appearance.
  •  V indicates a voice-only role.
Character Film
Scream Scream 2 Scream 3 Scream 4 Scream Scream VI Scream 7
1996 1997 2000 2011 2022 2023 2026
Ghostface Roger L. JacksonV[a]
Sidney Prescott Neve Campbell Mentioned Neve Campbell[7]
Dewey Riley David Arquette David ArquettePU David Arquette
Gale Weathers Courteney Cox
Billy Loomis Skeet Ulrich Mentioned Skeet UlrichVAU Mentioned Skeet Ulrich[b]
Randy Meeks Jamie Kennedy Jamie KennedyMC Jamie KennedyP[c] Mentioned
Cotton Weary Liev SchreiberMC Liev Schreiber
Casey Becker Drew Barrymore Heather GrahamMC Heather GrahamMCU Mentioned
Stu Macher Matthew Lillard Matthew LillardVAU Matthew LillardPU
Martha Meeks Heather Matarazzo Heather MatarazzoC TBA
Kirby Reed Hayden Panettiere Hayden PanettiereP[d] Hayden Panettiere
Judy Hicks Marley Shelton
Sam Carpenter Melissa Barrera
Tara Carpenter Jenna Ortega
Chad Meeks-Martin Mason Gooding[8]
Mindy Meeks-Martin Jasmin Savoy Brown[9]
Richie Kirsch Jack Quaid Jack QuaidMCU
Maureen Prescott (née Roberts) Lynn McReeP[10] Mentioned[e] Lynn McRee[11] Mentioned
Neil Prescott Lawrence Hecht[12] Mentioned Lawrence Hecht
Hank Loomis C.W. Morgan[12] C.W. MorganMC
Reporter Nancy O'Dell[13]MC
  1. ^ Also voiced by Beth Toussaint, Neve Campbell, Liev Schreiber, Courteney Cox, David Arquette, and Lynn McRee during Scream 3
  2. ^ Ulrich appears in Scream (2022) and Scream VI de-aged to appear as he did in Scream (1996).
  3. ^ Credited with "Special Thanks".
  4. ^ Credited with "Special Thanks".
  5. ^ A previously used photograph of Campbell and McRee from the original film is seen in Sidney's college dorm. McRee's presence is left unseen due to strategic camera work.

Introduced in Scream (1996)

[edit]

Scream is the first film in the Scream series. One year prior to the events of the film, Maureen Prescott is brutally raped and murdered, apparently by Cotton Weary. During the film, the fictional town of Woodsboro is again attacked by a murderer, who particularly targets Sidney Prescott, Maureen's daughter. Deputy Sheriff Dewey Riley investigates the murders, while news reporter Gale Weathers follows the story. Sidney, her boyfriend Billy Loomis and their friends Tatum Riley, Stu Macher and Randy Meeks try to survive the attacks. The killer is revealed as both Billy and Stu, who admit to having killed Maureen and framed Cotton for the act. Sidney then kills them both in retribution.

Principal Arthur Himbry

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Henry Winkler
  • Appeared in: Scream (1996)
  • Status: Deceased

Arthur Himbry is the principal of Woodsboro High School, attended by Sidney Prescott and her friends. He disciplines several students for wearing Ghostface masks, and comforts Sidney after she narrowly escapes the killer. While in his office, he is attacked by Ghostface and is stabbed to death. His body was said to have been discovered hanging up on the school's goalposts.[14]

Scream producer Bob Weinstein had Himbry's death added to the film after he realized that the film had "30 pages of script" without a death occurring.[15] This gave writer Kevin Williamson a reason for the teenagers to leave Stu Macher's party during the film's finale, a plot point Williamson had been struggling to formulate.[15] The language used by Himbry and his aggressive actions towards the students were among several reasons why the film's production was forced to leave Santa Rosa High School; the school board found the film's content unacceptable and did not want it filmed there.[16]

Winkler was uncredited in the film and was absent from posters and trailers.[17]

Billy Loomis

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Skeet Ulrich
  • Appeared in: Scream (1996), Scream (2022) (hallucination), and Scream VI (hallucination)
  • Status: Deceased

William "Billy" Loomis is a Woodsboro teenager, the boyfriend of Sidney Prescott and best friend of Stu Macher. He is also an avid fan of horror films. Following a series of murders, Billy becomes a suspect when he is found at Sidney's house with a cellphone shortly after she is taunted on the phone and attacked by a masked killer. Evidence is discovered that points to other characters, and Billy is removed as a suspect. During a party at Stu Macher's home, Billy and Sidney are reconciled and have sex, before Billy is stabbed by Ghostface. Later after a series of attacks, Billy is revealed to be alive and tries to help Sidney, obtaining in the process a gun which he then uses to shoot Randy Meeks. Billy then reveals himself to be the killer, having feigned the injury in the first place, with Stu confessing to be Billy's accomplice. The pair also admit to having murdered Sidney's mother, Maureen Prescott, one year previously, after she had an affair with Billy's father, causing Billy's parents to divorce and his mother to "abandon" him. Billy and Stu's plan to frame Sidney's father for their killing spree ultimately backfires when Sidney manages to escape and calls the police on them, while taunting Billy and Stu with a phone call, leaving Billy shocked and enraged. Despite his desperate attempts to kill Sidney, Billy is ultimately beaten by both her and reporter Gale Weathers, and finally dies after Sidney shoots him in the head.[14]

In Scream 2, Billy's mother seeks revenge on Sidney for Billy's death.[18] In Scream 3, Roman Bridger reveals that he provided Billy the evidence of his father's affair and gave him advice on how to kill Maureen.[19] In Scream (2022), it is revealed that Billy cheated on Sidney during the events of the first film, fathering a daughter named Sam Carpenter (whom he wasn't aware of). Billy appears in her visions throughout the film and Scream VI, encouraging her to fight back against the killers trying to murder her, appearing both as the good man Sam wished he was, and also tempting her to become Ghostface herself.

In "Stab", the fictional film within a film based on the murders, Billy is portrayed by Luke Wilson.[18] The character is parodied in the film Scary Movie as Bobby Prinze, portrayed by Jon Abrahams.[20]

Kevin Patrick Walls and Justin Whalin were final contenders for the role of Billy Loomis before it was won by Skeet Ulrich. Walls was instead cast in the minor role of Steve Orth.[21][15]

Casey Becker

[edit]
Barrymore was nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role in Scream.[22]
  • Portrayed by Drew Barrymore
  • Appeared in: Scream (1996)
  • Status: Deceased

Casey Becker is a Woodsboro teenager and the former girlfriend of Stu Macher. After receiving a taunting and threatening phone call, she is ordered to answer horror film trivia questions to save the life of her boyfriend, Steve Orth. When she answers incorrectly, Steve is disemboweled and she is asked another question to save her own life. When she refuses to answer, Ghostface chases her down and kills her, leaving her hanged from a tree and disemboweled. Later, it is revealed by Billy Loomis and Stu (who are Casey's Ghostface killers) that even if she answered correctly, they would have killed her anyway.[14] In "Stab", the fictional film within a film based on the murders, Casey is played by Heather Graham.[18]

Barrymore was already a successful actress when she appeared in Scream, at a time when casting a big name for a horror film was uncommon. She was originally signed to play the role of Sidney after reading the script and approaching the production team herself. However she decided she would rather play the part of Casey Becker because of her connection to the character and wanting to deliver a shock to the audience. It was not due to a scheduling conflict even though a very popular rumor states it was. This has been debunked by Barrymore herself as well as Wes Craven. Like her co-stars Neve Campbell and Courteney Cox, her appearance is credited by Craven for raising the profile of the film and helping to attract a larger female audience.[23]

Several scenes leading to Casey's eventual death gave rise to disputes between Craven and the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), the film rating board, who raised concerns over the violence and intensity of the scene. When she is initially stabbed in the chest by Ghostface, Craven insisted that he had only been able to make one successful take of the scene, so that no substitution was possible; he was, in fact, lying. The scene in which her corpse is hung from a tree and disemboweled was heavily edited: Craven was forced to remove all still shots of the body, and the scene itself was sped up to reduce its time on screen.[15]

Cotton Weary

[edit]
Liev Schreiber made a cameo appearance in the original Scream and reprised his role fully in Scream 2 and Scream 3.
  • Portrayed by Liev Schreiber
  • Appeared in: Scream (1996), Scream 2, and Scream 3
  • Status: Deceased

Cotton Weary was the original suspect in the rape and murder of Maureen Prescott, Sidney's mother. He was identified by Sidney, who found her mother's body after seeing someone she believed to be Cotton leaving her home. In Scream, it is revealed that Maureen was having an affair with Cotton before she was murdered by Billy Loomis and Stu Macher, who then planted evidence to frame Cotton.[14] In Scream 2, Cotton attempts to gain fame from his incarceration and exoneration for Maureen's murder, traveling to Windsor College to convince Sidney to agree to an interview. He later saves Sidney when she is about to be murdered by Mrs. Loomis, one of the Ghostface killers in Scream 2.[18] In Scream 3, Cotton has become famous for his exploits, hosting his own talk show. He and his girlfriend Christine Hamilton are attacked by the latest Ghostface, who demands to know the whereabouts of Sidney after she goes into hiding. When Cotton refuses to tell, Ghostface kills him.[19]

In the original Scream 2 script, Cotton was captured by the real Ghostface killers, Derek Feldman, Hallie McDaniel and Mrs. Loomis. After Mrs. Loomis kills Derek and Hallie, she intends to frame Cotton for the recent murder spree, but he attacks and stabs her to death. He then tries to take revenge on Sidney for his false imprisonment, noting that the evidence points to him being an innocent victim. He and Sidney stab each other, but their fates have not been revealed.[24] Following the leak of the script on the Internet, extensive rewrites were undertaken, changing this plot.[25]

Dewey Riley

[edit]
Arquette as his character Dewey Riley on the set of Scream 4.
  • Portrayed by David Arquette
  • Appeared in: Scream (1996), Scream 2, Scream 3, Scream 4, Scream (2022), Scream VI (photos only), and Scream 7 (upcoming)
  • Status: Deceased

Dwight "Dewey" Riley is the Deputy Sheriff of Woodsboro, the brother of Tatum Riley and friend of Sidney Prescott. After a series of murders, he helps lead the investigation, while pursuing a romance with Gale Weathers. He is stabbed by Ghostface during the finale of Scream, but survives.[14] Dewey returns in Scream 2, suffering from a limp and weakened arm caused by nerve damage as a result of his stabbing. He travels to Windsor College to help Sidney after a series of copycat Ghostface murders. He is attacked and stabbed repeatedly by the current Ghostface but again survives.[18] In Scream 3, he aids an investigation into a new Ghostface, later revealed to be Roman Bridger. Dewey shoots Roman in the head, killing him. In the aftermath he asks Gale to marry him, and she accepts.[19] In Scream 4, Dewey has married Gale and returned with her to Woodsboro, becoming the new Sheriff and recovered from his past injuries. After a new series of Ghostface murders on the anniversary of Billy Loomis' and Stu Macher's spree, Dewey again investigates. By now, his relationship with Gale is strained, but, after Gale is badly injured by Ghostface, they resolve their differences.[26] In the fifth installment of the series, also titled Scream, Dewey and Gale are divorced. After he saves Tara Carpenter from being murdered in the hospital, Ghostface stabs him in the stomach by surprise, pulling the knife up through his torso, causing his death.[27] In Scream VI, the shrine scene shows a booth dedicated to Dewey, where we see his photographs and portraits, as well as badges and a gun. Dewey is mentioned several times by other characters (including Ghostface).[28] Arquette is set to reprise the role in Scream 7.

Dewey had been intended to die in the finale of the first installment of Scream.[29] However, Craven filmed an additional scene, in which Dewey survives and is placed in an ambulance, in case test audiences reacted positively to the character. When they did, this scene was added to the film, and his death was instead depicted in the fifth installment of Scream.[15]

Arquette was originally brought in to audition for the role of Billy Loomis in Scream, but preferred the character of Dewey and requested to audition for that instead. Despite resistance from the production team, who were concerned that the role was described as "hunky", rather than the younger, goofier approach of Arquette, Craven appreciated the idea and cast him in the role.[30]

In Stab, the fictional film within a film based on the Ghostface murders, and again in Stab 3, Dewey is portrayed by David Schwimmer[18] and fictional actor Tom Prinze, respectively.[19]

Gale Weathers

[edit]
Cox was starring in the sitcom Friends when she took on the role of Gale Weathers.
  • Portrayed by Courteney Cox
  • Appeared in: Scream (1996), Scream 2, Scream 3, Scream 4, Scream (2022), Scream VI, and Scream 7 (upcoming)
  • Status: Alive

Gale Weathers is a news reporter for the fictional news show Top Story. Prior to the events of the films, she was involved in coverage of the murder of Maureen Prescott and the resulting trial of Cotton Weary, during which she criticized the testimony of Sidney Prescott. In Scream, she returns to Woodsboro to cover the current murder spree. During the finale of the film, her cameraman, Kenny Jones, is murdered, and she is left for dead after a car crash. She is later revealed to be alive and witnesses the confession of Billy Loomis and Stu Macher to their role in the killings. She helps Sidney defeat Billy and, after the events of the film, writes a new book about the Ghostface murders.[14] In Scream 2, she travels to Windsor College to cover the current murder spree. She often clashed with reporter Debbie Salt, whom is revealed in the end as Nancy Loomis, Billy Loomis' mother. She witnesses the apparent death of Dewey Riley before she herself is shot by Mickey Altieri, one of the killers. She survives and helps Sidney to kill Mickey.[18] In Scream 3, she is shown to have written another book, this time about the Windsor College killings. She travels to Hollywood to aid the investigation of a new series of murders there. At the end of the film, Dewey asks Gale to marry him, and she accepts.[19] In Scream 4, Gale has married Dewey, becoming Gale Weathers-Riley, but their relationship is strained. She has written a series of novels about fictional Ghostface murders; these have been turned into new films in the fictional Stab series. She attempts to reignite her journalistic career by investigating the new murders, but is attacked and badly wounded by the new Ghostface. She survives and resolves her differences with Dewey.[26]

In the fictional Stab series of films within a film, Gale is portrayed by fictional actress Jennifer Jolie.[19]

Courteney Cox was starring in the NBC sitcom Friends when she was cast in Scream, marking a new trend: casting established and popular actors and actresses in horror films. Craven opined that her presence, like Neve Campbell's, helped raise the profile of Scream and attract a large female audience.[23] Brooke Shields and Janeane Garofalo were the original choices for the role of Gale. Cox was not even considered at first, as it was not believed that she could play Gale's selfish, abusive and aggressive character after playing the softer, nicer role of Monica Geller in Friends.[31] Cox, however, was eager to play a "bitch" character, specifically to contrast with her Friends character, and repeatedly lobbied the production team until she won the role.[30]

Ghostface

[edit]

Ghostface is a fictional identity, created in Scream by Sidney's boyfriend Billy Loomis and his friend Stu Macher to conduct a murder spree in the town of Woodsboro. The costume they use is a generic Halloween costume, officially called "Father Death", that allows anyone to adopt the identity and makes the killers difficult to identify.[14] The killers taunt their victims on the phone before attacking, using a voice changer to disguise their true identity. While in costume, the character is voiced by voice actor Roger L. Jackson. The Ghostface identity is adopted by other killers after the death of Billy and Stu. In Scream 2, it is taken by Billy's mother Nancy Loomis and her accomplice, Mickey Altieri. In Scream 3, it is taken by Sidney's half-brother, Roman Bridger, the director of Stab 3. In Scream 4, on the anniversary of Billy and Stu's murder spree, a new Ghostface emerges, revealed to be Sidney's cousin Jill Roberts and her friend Charlie Walker. In Scream (2022), it's used by Richie Kirsch and Amber Freeman, who are respectively the boyfriend of Sam Carpenter and best friend of her sister Tara. In Scream VI, Ghostface is revealed to be Richie's entire family, father Wayne Bailey and siblings Ethan and Quinn. In the finale of each film, the current Ghostface killers confront the protagonist and explain their motivation for stalking her.[14][18][19][26] In the finale of Scream VI, after the heroes gain the upper hand against the killers, Ghostface plays a more heroic role as he gives a taunting phone call to the Ghostface mastermind, Wayne Bailey, before making his entrance and stabbing a frightened Bailey multiple times. Ghostface is then revealed to be Sam, wearing Billy's robe and mask, who then ultimately kills Bailey by stabbing him in the eye.

Jackson, who voices Ghostface in all the Scream films, was chosen for the part after weeks of local casting in Santa Rosa, California. He was intended only as a temporary voice, to be replaced in the post-production phase of the film with a dubbed voice,[31][32] but his contribution was retained because Craven felt he imbued the voice with a truly evil malevolence.[33] He and the casts of the films were intentionally prevented from meeting for most if not all of each film's production, to discourage the cast from putting a face to the voice, and to make him seem more menacing when interacting with the characters on the phone.[15][16]

Hank Loomis

[edit]
  • Portrayed by C.W. Morgan
  • Appeared in: Scream (1996), and Scream 3 (archive footage)
  • Status: Alive

Hank Loomis is the father of Billy, and the ex-husband of Mrs. Loomis. Hank is a lawyer and represents his son when Billy is brought in to the police station for questioning. It is later revealed that Hank was having an affair with Maureen Prescott, which is what led to his wife leaving him.[14] In the promotional material for Scream 3, it is revealed that Hank used to be the main lawyer for Sunrise Studios, before leaving to set up his own law office in Woodsboro.[34]

Kenny Jones

[edit]
  • Portrayed by W. Earl Brown
  • Appeared in: Scream (1996)
  • Status: Deceased

Kenneth "Kenny" Jones is Gale Weathers' cameraman on the fictional news show "Top Story". In Scream, Kenny accompanies Gale as she reports on the series of murders in Woodsboro. After seeing on a hidden camera that Randy Meeks is about to be murdered, he leaves his van to help, and his throat is slit by Ghostface.[14] His surname is revealed in an Easter egg in the opening of Scream (2022 film).

Kenny's neck being slashed was one of the several scenes that had to be toned down by Craven at the behest of the MPAA in order to avoid the restrictive NC-17 rating. The scene was shortened because the MPAA felt that Kenny's expression after his throat was cut was too disturbing.[15]

Maureen Prescott

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Lynn McRee
  • Appeared in: Scream (1996) (photos only), Scream 2 (photo only), Scream 3 (voice only), and Scream 4 (photo only)
  • Status: Deceased

Maureen Prescott (née Roberts) is the mother of Sidney Prescott and wife of Neil Prescott. She is murdered before the events of the Scream films but receives a mention in every film, with the first four films' killing spree motivations back to her in some way and being blamed by many (including Sidney) as the overall cause of the Ghostface spree. She conducted several extra-marital affairs, including those with Cotton Weary and Hank Loomis, the father of Billy Loomis. Cotton was arrested and convicted of her murder. In Scream, a killer taunts Sidney on the phone about her mother's murder; this killer is later identified as Sidney's boyfriend Billy Loomis and his friend Stu Macher. Billy reveals that it was he and Stu who murdered Maureen and framed Cotton for it.[14] In Scream 3, the current Ghostface uses Maureen's synthesized voice and image to taunt Sidney and lure her out of hiding. The killer is unveiled as Roman Bridger, who reveals that he is Maureen's son and Sidney's half-brother. For a two-year period in her youth, before she met Sidney's father, Maureen had traveled to Hollywood to become an actress under the pseudonym Rina Reynolds. During this time she was impregnated with Roman by Hollywood producer John Milton, after being gang-raped. She then gave him up for adoption. After Maureen returned to Woodsboro, despite her marriage to Neil and their daughter's birth, the psychological trauma of the rape drove Maureen nymphomaniac. When the adult Roman found her, she denied she had been Rina and rejected him. Roman then proceeded to film her affairs and showed the footage to Billy before convincing him to kill Maureen, starting the chain of events that occur throughout the Scream films.[19]

Scream 4 introduces Maureen's sister Kate Roberts and her niece Jill Roberts. Sidney observing a photo gallery of Maureen in Kate's home was filmed for Scream 4, but it was deleted from the final cut.[26] Scream (2022) shows Gale's remorse for writing the book about her murder, believing she is responsible for the Ghostface killings after. Sidney reassures her, however, that it was Billy Loomis who started it and they will end it.

Neil Prescott

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Lawrence Hecht
  • Appeared in: Scream (1996), and Scream 3
  • Status: Alive

Neil Prescott is the father of Sidney Prescott and widower of Maureen Prescott. In Scream, he leaves Woodsboro on business and later disappears without trace, raising suspicions that he may be the perpetrator of a series of murders in the town. It is revealed in the finale that he was kidnapped by the real killers, Billy Loomis and Stu Macher, who intended to frame him for their crimes. Neil is saved by his daughter.[14] It is theorized that his absence from Scream 2 is to emphasize Sidney's independence in college; he is mentioned in-film as being out of the country on business. He appears briefly in Scream 3, commenting on Sidney's withdrawal from her friends and life. Scream 4 introduces his sister-in-law Kate Roberts and his niece Jill Roberts.[19]

Randy Meeks

[edit]
Jamie Kennedy stars in the first two Scream films, and cameos in the third.
  • Portrayed by Jamie Kennedy
  • Appeared in: Scream (1996), Scream 2, Scream 3 (cameo), and Scream (2022) (photo only)
  • Status: Deceased

Randy Meeks is a Woodsboro teenager. He is a friend of Sidney Prescott, for whom he has romantic feelings, and is an avid fan of horror movies. He uses his knowledge of horror film plots and clichés to define the series of murders that occur in Scream, Scream 2 and Scream 3. In Scream, Randy is one of the suspects because of him habitually referencing horror movie trivia like Ghostface. He becomes suspicious of Stu Macher when he expresses no concern for his girlfriend Tatum Riley when she went missing, and then discovers that he is one of the Ghostface killers prior to him revealing himself to Sidney with Billy Loomis. Randy is later shot by Loomis but survives. [14] In Scream 2, he attends the fictional Windsor College with Sidney, studying film. When a new series of murders begins, Randy taunts the killer over the phone, mocking Billy Loomis' in the previous film. During this call, the killer dragged him into a van and killed him. It is later revealed that Nancy Loomis, Billy's mother, killed Randy out of anger at his insults to her son.[18] Randy appears posthumously in Scream 3 in a recorded video, in which he explains to Sidney the rules of a trilogy, similar to how he explained the rules in the first two films.[19]

In the published screenplay for Scream, an alternate ending had Randy (rather than Sidney) kill Stu before asking Sidney out on a date.[29] Before a script leak forced the rewriting of parts of the Scream 2 screenplay, Randy was to be Gale Weathers' cameraman rather than a student as shown in the finished film. His death, however, remained the same.[25] Craven and Ehren Kruger considered bringing Randy back in Scream 3, revealing him to have survived his attack in Scream 2 but abandoned the idea as too unrealistic.[32]

Casting for Randy was contested between Kennedy and Breckin Meyer. The production team favored Kennedy, as they believed he had certain qualities that made him more suitable than Meyer for the role.[31] Kennedy, however, had had no major roles prior to Scream, and Dimension Films, the studio producing the films, was eager to have a more prominent actor in the production alongside the other well-known stars such as Barrymore and Cox.[31] The production team itself, however, was adamant that Kennedy was the best choice and fought successfully to keep him in.[16]

Sidney Prescott

[edit]
Neve Campbell (pictured) won the Saturn Award for Best Actress for her role in Scream.[35]
  • Portrayed by Neve Campbell
  • Appeared in: Scream (1996), Scream 2, Scream 3, Scream 4, Scream (2022), and Scream 7 (upcoming)
  • Status: Alive

In Scream, a year after the murder of her mother Maureen, she is stalked by a killer, later revealed to be her boyfriend Billy Loomis and his friend Stu Macher. These two prove to have been Maureen's murderers, Billy being motivated by Maureen's affair with his father, which caused his mother to leave home. Sidney kills both of them in self-defense.[14] In Scream 2, while attending college, she again becomes the target of a masked killer, this time her boyfriend's friend Mickey Altieri and Nancy Loomis, who is seeking revenge for the death of her son Billy Loomis. Once more Sidney manages to survive the attempts on her life.[18] During Scream 3, she is drawn to Hollywood by yet another killer. She discovers that this one is her half-brother Roman Bridger, who wants to kill her out of anger at his abandonment by Maureen.[19] In Scream 4, she returns to Woodsboro to promote her new self-help book about overcoming the tragedies of her life, but is targeted once again by a new Ghostface, who turns out to be her cousin Jill Roberts who is envious of Sidney's fame and wants to become the new "Sidney Prescott".[26] In Scream (2022), Sidney is revealed to be married to Mark Evans, who will appear in the upcoming Scream 7. They now have three children together; two daughters and one son. Sidney returns to Woodsboro so that she and Gale can help Sam Carpenter and her sister Tara to kill the new Ghostfaces, avenging Dewey and the other victims. The character does not appear in Scream VI, but Gale Weathers states that Sidney and her husband, Mark, have gone into hiding with their three children in response to the latest killings in New York. Despite her absence, Campbell's likeness is applied via drawings in the abandoned Stab cave, showcasing every previous killing including some visual references of those events. Sidney will reappear in the upcoming Scream 7.

In the fictional films within a film Stab and Stab 2, based on the murders, Sidney is portrayed by Tori Spelling as herself.[18] In Stab 3: Return to Woodsboro, she would have been portrayed by fictional actress Angelina Tyler; however, Angelina is killed by Ghostface.[19]

Neve Campbell won the Saturn Award for Best Actress in 1997 for her role as Sidney Prescott in Scream[35] and the MTV Movie Award for Best Female Performance in 1998 for her role in Scream 2.[36] When she was cast in Scream, Campbell was starring in the television drama series Party of Five. It was previously unheard of to cast an established television actress in a horror film, but, following the success of this casting and that of Courteney Cox, the practice became common in many later horror films. Craven opined that their presence helped raise the profile of Scream and attract a large female audience.[23]

Steve Orth

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Kevin Patrick Walls
  • Appeared in: Scream (1996)
  • Status: Deceased

Steven "Steve" Orth is a Woodsboro teenager and the boyfriend of Casey Becker. He is captured and held hostage by Ghostface, who keeps him bound to a chair outside Casey's home. Casey is made to answer horror-film trivia questions to save his life. When she gets a question wrong, Steve is disemboweled and dies.[14]

Walls auditioned for the part of Billy Loomis, but took the smaller role of Steve when Ulrich was cast as Billy.[15]

Stu Macher

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Matthew Lillard
  • Appeared in: Scream (1996), Scream VI (photo only), and Scream 7 (upcoming)
  • Status: Deceased

Stuart "Stu" Macher is a Woodsboro teenager, the ex-boyfriend of Casey Becker and boyfriend of Tatum Riley. Following a series of murders in the town, starting with the killing of Stu's ex-girlfriend Casey Becker, school is suspended. Stu hosts a party at his house to celebrate. At the party, Ghostface murders Tatum. Billy Loomis is revealed to be Ghostface, and Stu his accomplice. Stu cites peer pressure as his motivation and thought Billy's was for sadistic thrills and gratifications, not knowing his vendetta against the Prescotts. After Sidney turns the tables on them and foils their plan to frame Sidney's father for their killing spree, Stu becomes heartbroken that his parents will be "mad at him", before becoming enraged and trying to kill Sidney, but Sidney beats him and ultimately drops a television on the terrified Stu's head, seemingly electrocuting him.[14] In Scream 3, it is revealed that, under Roman Bridger's advice, Billy had planned to set Stu up as the "fall guy" for their killing spree in case they got caught, while his getting an easy sentence for being an accomplice.[19]

Matthew Lillard has an uncredited cameo at a sorority party in Scream 2.[37] He revealed in a 2009 interview that Stu was originally intended to be the killer in Scream 3, having survived his apparent death. From prison he was to orchestrate new Ghostface attacks on high school students, ultimately targeting Sidney.[38][39] Following the Columbine High School massacre, which took place shortly before production began, this plot was abandoned and the script was rewritten without Stu to avoid presenting violence and murder in a high school setting.[16] Many of Lillard's notable and humorous lines in the film were improvised.[15] He was cast by chance, after accompanying his girlfriend at the time to a separate audition in the facility where Scream auditions were also taking place. Scream casting director Lisa Beach saw Lillard and, believing he had the characteristics required of the character, asked him to audition.[31] Lillard also subsequently made vocal cameos in Scream 3 and Scream (2022) as the voice of Ghostface respectively using a voice changer and in the film within a film Stab 8, and appearing again as a background partygoer in Scream (2022), participating in the "To Wes!" toast. Stu's photo can be seen on the investigation board in Scream VI, while his red robe worn at the end of the first film and the TV used to kill him can be seen in the Ghostface shrine. Kirby Reed ultimately uses the same TV to kill Ethan.

Lillard has been confirmed as part of the cast of Scream 7, reprising his role as Stu (in one form or another).[40]

Tatum Riley

[edit]
Tatum Riley was one of McGowan's earliest starring roles.
  • Portrayed by Rose McGowan
  • Appeared in: Scream (1996)
  • Status: Deceased

Tatum Riley is a Woodsboro teenager, the best friend of Sidney Prescott, the girlfriend of Stu Macher and the sister of town Deputy Dewey Riley. After a series of murders begin in the town, Tatum attempts to protect Sidney from the ensuing media attention, since the killings occurred on the anniversary of the brutal murder of Sidney's mother. Tatum's boyfriend Stu hosts a house party, during which the killer strikes, attacking her in the garage. She tries to escape through a pet flap fitted to the automatic garage door, but becomes stuck, and the killer raises the door. Tatum's neck is crushed between the rising door and the top of its frame, killing her.[14]

Twenty-five years after her death, her older brother Dewey is shown in possession of her ashes in his trailer.[41]

Actresses Marley Shelton,[42] Melinda Clarke and Rebecca Gayheart also auditioned for the role, however, McGowan was cast as Tatum because the production team felt she best embodied the "spunky" nature of the character.[31] McGowan put herself in charge of Tatum's wardrobe, as she conceived her character less tomboyish and more cute and appealing than the costume designer Cynthia Bergstrom had devised.[43] She even extended it to Tatum's bedroom by removing the posters of the Indigo Girls and replaced them with kitten posters.[44] Additionally, in order to distinguish her character from Neve Campbell's, McGowan had to dye her hair blonde.[45]

Tatum's death, like those of Casey Becker and Kenny Brown, caused conflict between director Wes Craven and the MPAA film rating board. Craven was ultimately forced to reduce any lingering shots of her body, necessitating a quick visual cutaway once she dies.[15] While filming Tatum's death scene, McGowan discovered she actually could fit through the pet flap and as a result, she would fall out of it during filming. The producer had to staple her clothes to the flap to prevent her from falling out of it again.[31]

Introduced in Scream 2

[edit]

Scream 2 is the second film in the Scream series and is set one year after the Woodsboro murder spree. Sidney Prescott and Randy Meeks now attend the fictional Windsor College as students. "Stab", a film based on the Woodsboro murders, has just been released, and a copycat murder spree begins during its premiere. The new Ghostface attacks Sidney and her friends, killing Randy and wounding Dewey Riley, before being revealed as Sidney's classmate Mickey Altieri and Nancy Loomis, the mother of Scream killer Billy Loomis.

Cici Cooper

[edit]

Casey "Cici" Cooper is a student at Windsor College. While alone in her house, Cici is attacked by Ghostface. She runs upstairs pursued by the killer, who throws her through a glass door on to a balcony and stabs her twice in the back before picking her up and throwing her over the balcony to her death. From her murder and the preceding murders of Phil Stevens and Maureen Evans, Gale Weathers and Dewey Riley deduce that the new killer is choosing targets with names similar to those of the victims of the original Ghostface killers, Billy Loomis and Stu Macher.[18]

Nancy Loomis

[edit]
Metcalf had just finished her run in the hit sitcom Roseanne when she starred in Scream 2, continuing the trend started in Scream of casting popular and established actresses.
  • Portrayed by Laurie Metcalf
  • Appeared in: Scream 2, and Scream VI (photo only)
  • Status: Deceased

Debbie Salt is the pseudonym of Nancy Loomis, referred to simply as "Billy's mother" and "Mrs. Loomis" in the film. She is a local news reporter covering the series of murders at Windsor College who often clashed with Gale Weathers. In the finale, Salt is revealed to be Billy's mother, and the copycat Ghostface alongside her accomplice, Mickey. It is also revealed that Mrs. Loomis killed Randy Meeks because he criticized her son Billy on the phone. Before the events of Scream, she leaves her home after learning of her husband's affair with Sidney Prescott's mother Maureen, abandoning Billy and providing his motivation for his killing spree in Scream. After Billy's death, Mrs. Loomis undertakes a physical makeover, losing weight to change her appearance. She then recruits Mickey from a website devoted to serial killers, to enact a plan for revenge against Sidney. She ultimately betrays Mickey and shoots him, claiming to have indulged his desire for fame to gain his help, while she really intends to kill Sidney to avenge Billy's death, despite the fact that her son was a killer and that her own abandonment caused her son to become one, which Sidney points out. Cotton Weary intervenes during their confrontation, and Nancy attempts to manipulate him into letting her kill Sidney, but to her horror, she fails to do so and Cotton saves Sidney's life by shooting her in the throat. Sidney eventually kills Nancy by fatally shooting through the head, just like what she did to Billy. [18]

In the original Scream 2 script, Nancy worked with Hallie and Derek, not Mickey, though she still killed her allies. She intended to frame Cotton for the murders, but he managed to stab and kill her.[24] After the script leaked on to the Internet, it underwent rewrites that removed this ending.[25]

In Scream VI, Mrs. Loomis' first name is revealed to have been "Nancy", listed on Kirby Reed's FBI list of previous killers with their photo and death year.

Derek Feldman

[edit]

Derek Feldman is a pre-med student at Windsor College, a friend of Mickey and boyfriend of Sidney Prescott. After publicly declaring his love for Sidney, he is captured by his fellow frat brothers and restrained as a prank. During the finale, as Sidney is escaping Ghostface, she finds Derek still restrained and tries to untie him before the killer arrives. Ghostface reveals himself as Mickey and accuses Derek of being his accomplice, causing Sidney to hesitate in freeing him. After Derek threatens Mickey, Mickey shoots him through the heart, killing him.[18]

In the original Scream 2 screenplay, Derek was one of the killers working with Mrs. Loomis and Hallie McDaniel. He and Hallie, who were also secret lovers, shared the motivation of gaining fame for the murders when they were caught, but were both killed by Mrs. Loomis to preserve her anonymity.[24] After the script was leaked on the Internet, it underwent rewrites, removing this ending.[25]

Hallie McDaniel

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Elise Neal
  • Appeared in: Scream 2
  • Status: Deceased

Hallie McDaniel is a psychology major at Windsor College and the roommate of Sidney Prescott. She is also sworn to the Delta Lambda Zeta sorority. When Sidney is taken into protective custody, Hallie accompanies her, but Ghostface attacks the car in which they are traveling and murders the policemen guarding them. Ghostface hijacks their car, but crashes, rendering himself unconscious and allowing Sidney and Hallie to escape. When Sidney returns to the vehicle to discover the killer's identity, she finds him missing from the car. Ghostface leaps out at Hallie as she waits nearby for Sidney, and stabs her to death.[18]

In the original Scream 2 screenplay, Hallie was one of the killers, working with Mrs. Loomis and Derek Feldman. She and Derek, who were also secret lovers, shared the motivation of gaining fame for the murders when they were caught, but were both killed by Mrs. Loomis to preserve her anonymity.[24] After the script was leaked on the Internet, it underwent rewrites, removing this ending.[25]

Joel Martin

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Duane Martin
  • Appeared in: Scream 2
  • Status: Alive

Joel Martin is Gale Weathers' new cameraman, replacing Kenny Brown from Scream.

When the Windsor College murders begin, Joel becomes scared of Gale's need to follow the trail. After he reads her book "The Woodsboro Murders", he becomes even more reluctant, especially when he learns about the fate of Kenny and greatly dislikes it when anybody mentions his name in front of him. He goes to buy some doughnuts and coffee and is shocked to come back and find Randy Meeks murdered in his van, passing out once he sees the gruesome sight. Left without his van due to it being an official crime scene and finally being pushed to his limits following Randy's death, he leaves, giving Gale all of the news footage that they had filmed so far and telling her that she needed her "head examined". He finally returns to Gale to once again be her cameraman.

In the original Scream 2 screenplay, Joel had a larger role as a member of Sidney Prescott's group of friends. His corpse was found during the film's finale. After this script was leaked on the Internet, it underwent rewrites, changing the role of several characters and making Joel a cameraman.[25] In Scream (2022) and Scream VI, he is implied to be the husband of Martha Meeks and the father of Mindy and Chad Meeks-Martin (but it was never confirmed).

Maureen Evans and Phil Stevens

[edit]

Maureen Evans and her boyfriend Phil Stevens are students at Windsor College. They attend a sneak preview of the film "Stab", during which Phil goes to the bathroom and hears strange whimpering from the next stall. He presses his ear against the divider to listen closer, but a blade is forced through the divider, stabbing Phil in the ear and killing him. The killer, wearing a Ghostface costume, returns to the screening and sits beside Maureen, before mortally stabbing her. The audience believe her to be part of a publicity stunt, until she falls dead in front of the cinema screen.[18] Their deaths are satirized in Scary Movie.[20]

Mickey Altieri

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Timothy Olyphant
  • Appeared in: Scream 2, and Scream VI (photo only)
  • Status: Deceased
Olyphant in 2011.

Mickey Altieri is a student at Windsor College and Derek's best friend. Like Randy Meeks from Scream, he shows an avid interest in horror films and sequels. In the finale he is revealed as the current Ghostface, with his accomplice Mrs. Loomis. He kills Sidney's boyfriend Derek in front of her. Mickey states that he carried out the killings with the intention of getting caught, believing he would receive fame for his deeds and from the resulting trial, and intending to blame film violence for influencing him. Contrary to Mickey's desires, however, Mrs. Loomis intends to disappear after the killings; so she shoots him, seemingly fatally. Before Mickey collapses, he fires his gun, wounding Gale and she falls offstage. After Mrs. Loomis' defeat, though, Mickey leaps to his feet screaming, but is finally killed by Gale and Sidney.[18]

In the original Scream 2 script, Mickey was murdered by Ghostface while trying to save Sidney, but this was changed in rewrites after the original script was leaked online.[24][25]

Scream VI sees a new Ghostface in NYC who attacks the remaining four survivors from the previous film. The new killer is leaving masks worn by past Ghostfaces. After an attack at Sam and Tara's apartment the killer leaves the mask used by Mickey and Mrs. Loomis. Later on a photo of Mickey and all the other past killers can be seen while Kirby Reed (now FBI) is investigating.

Mickey is the only Ghostface killer who was a serial killer prior to adopting the Ghostface moniker.

Stab Casey Becker

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Heather Graham
  • Appeared in: Scream 2, Scream 4 (archive footage), and Scream (2022) (photo only)
  • Status: Alive

Stab Casey Becker is the movie version of Casey Becker, portrayed by Drew Barrymore. She takes a shower while making popcorn. She also does not have a boyfriend, unlike her real-life counterpart. In the fourth film, Gale is attacked at Stab-A-Thon as the Woodsboro High teenagers watch the famed Stab opening scene, quoting her lines of dialogue. In the fifth film, Tara sees Heather Graham's image on her QuickSearch results when drilled with a movie trivia question by Ghostface. She identifies Heather Graham as the actress who portrays Casey (a fictionalised version of herself).

Film Class Guy #1

[edit]

Joshua Jackson is a film student at Windsor College, in class with Randy Meeks, Mickey Altieri, and Cici Cooper. Credited as Film Class Guy #1, the character was retroactively established to be a fictionalised version of the actor Joshua Jackson in Scream (2022).

Introduced in Scream 3

[edit]

In Scream 3, the third film in the Scream series, a new series of Ghostface murders begins during production of Stab 3, a film within a film based on the murders in Scream and Scream 2. Sidney Prescott has hidden herself away, and Ghostface leaves photographs of a young Maureen Prescott, her mother, at the crime scenes, hoping to lure her to Hollywood. The killer is revealed as Roman Bridger, Sidney's unknown half-brother and Maureen's son. Roman was conceived after the young Maureen was gang-raped in Hollywood while attempting to become an actress under the pseudonym Rina Reynolds. Baby Roman was given up for adoption, but as an adult he found Maureen, who rejected him. In revenge for this, Roman convinced Billy Loomis to kill her. Sidney and Roman fight, and Sidney stabs him before Dewey Riley shoots him through the head and kills him.

Angelina Tyler

[edit]

Angelina Tyler is the actress who plays the role of Sidney Prescott in Stab 3, taking over for Tori Spelling who declined to reprise her role as Sidney. To win this role, she took part in a talent competition, but she later reveals that she had sex with John Milton, the producer of the Stab films, to secure the job. Throughout the film, she feigns a sweet and innocent ingenue persona which slowly starts to unravel in the third act. While attending the birthday party of Roman Bridger, she is attacked and killed by Ghostface.[19]

In an early version of the script, Angelina was a second Ghostface, Roman's lover and accomplice, with the original draft elaborating that she was a former classmate of Sidney's from Woodsboro, whose real name was Angie Crick. Her motivation was stated as her idolizing Sidney and wanting her fame and attention, thus taking on the role of Sidney in the "Stab" film, and giving Roman's and Sidney's relationship incestuous vibes. The idea was later scrapped, Craven mentioning in the film's director's commentary that they couldn't get the studio on board with the idea.[46] Editor Patrick Lussier and producer Marianne Maddalena left it ambiguous as to whether Angelina was actually dead due to being dragged off, discussing the idea in the film's commentary. They called her death scene "dubious".[47] In a subsequent Scream Trilogy DVD boxset booklet, Angelina is not listed as a deceased character from Scream 3.[47] This may have just been an oversight, but fans have speculated it is connected to all this other information about the plan to have her as a killer. Scream VI, however, lists Roman Bridger as the only Ghostface in the Hollywood killings, implying Angelina wasn't involved at all.

Christine Hamilton

[edit]

Christine Hamilton is Cotton Weary's girlfriend. In the opening of Scream 3, she is stalked by the current Ghostface, who uses a voice synthesizer to sound like Cotton, convincing her that Cotton is behind the mask. When the real Cotton arrives, she believes him to be Ghostface and attacks him, while the real Ghostface approaches her from behind and stabs her to death.[19]

Jennifer Jolie

[edit]
Critical reaction to Posey's performance as Jennifer Jolie was highly positive. The role earned her an MTV Movie Award nomination.[48]
  • Portrayed by Parker Posey
  • Appeared in: Scream 3, and Scream (2022) (photo only)
  • Status: Deceased

Jennifer Jolie (real name Judy Jurgenstern) is the actress playing the role of Gale Weathers in the first two Stab movies, and the cancelled Stab 3: Return to Woodsboro. After a new series of Ghostface murders, Jennifer believes she may be the next victim and starts following the real Gale, hoping the killer will choose to kill her instead. While attending a birthday party for Roman Bridger she is attacked and killed by Ghostface.[19]

In the fifth film, Tara sees an image of Jennifer when she uses IMDB to find the cast of the original Stab. In the sixth film, a Jennifer Jolie Retrospective was shown to once be playing in New York City, as indicated by the marquee on the old theatre.

Parker Posey was nominated in 2000 for an MTV Movie Award for Best Comedic Performance for her role as Jennifer Jolie, losing to Adam Sandler, who won it for his performance in Big Daddy (1999).[48]

John Milton

[edit]

John Milton is the producer of the three fictional Stab movies. He is revealed to have known Maureen Prescott in her youth, when she was an aspiring actress using the pseudonym Rina Reynolds. It was during one of Milton's parties in the 1970s that Rina was gang-raped and became pregnant with Roman Bridger, with Milton himself being his father, making him (not Maureen) the overall catalyst of the Ghostface killing sprees and responsible for the ruination of the lives of Maureen's family, especially her children. Ghostface, revealed as Roman, kidnaps Milton and murders him in front of Sidney, blaming his father for his putrid existence as an offspring of rape and their mother's nymphomania, and as a part of his scheme to vilify Sidney before he kills her.[19]

Mark Kincaid

[edit]

Mark Kincaid is a detective investigating the most recent Ghostface murders. He displays an interest in horror films, and in the history of Sidney Prescott, later implied that he is infatuated with her. When Sidney is forced to confront the killer, Kincaid is concerned for her and secretly follows her. Kincaid is attacked and severely wounded by Ghostface. After Ghostface is killed, he is seen with Sidney, Dewey and Gale at Sidney's house, preparing to watch a movie.

Martha Meeks

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Heather Matarazzo
  • Appeared in: Scream 3, and Scream (2022)
  • Status: Alive

Martha Meeks is Randy Meeks' younger sister, four years his junior. After learning of the new Ghostface murders, she sneaks onto the Stab 3: Return to Woodsboro set to give her friend Dewey Riley a tape recorded by Randy prior to his death in Scream 2; it contains his advice for surviving the concluding chapter of a trilogy and the third series of Ghostface murders. She is surprised to find Sidney, now out of hiding, there alongside the former deputy.[19]

In the DVD commentary, Marianne Maddalena stated that a line reference to Martha being in Hollywood for a game show was deleted, explaining how she bypassed security on the set.[49]

In Scream (2022), Martha is the 39-year-old mother to fraternal twin children: Chad and Mindy Meeks-Martin. Both children are high school seniors, suggesting she became a mother at 21. She leaves snacks for the kids to discuss the new killings, and reunites with Dewey for the first time on-screen since the third film after telling him "Bye Dewey, come visit us soon". She appears speechless at his unkempt appearance, before Chad signals her to leave. Later, a text message sent by Chad reveals he texted Liv that he snuck out of his mother's house behind her back.

Roman Bridger

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Scott Foley
  • Appeared in: Scream 3, Scream (2022) (footage), Scream VI (photo only) and Scream 7 (upcoming)
  • Status: Deceased

Roman Bridger is the director of Stab 3: Return to Woodsboro. During his birthday party at John Milton's mansion, he is found in the basement, apparently murdered. Later, when Sidney Prescott is confronted by Ghostface, the latter is unmasked as Roman, who has faked his death to eliminate himself as a suspect. Roman tells Sidney that he is her maternal half-brother, relating the circumstances of his conception by Milton (who is unaware that Roman is his son) and later rejection by Maureen Prescott. Having admitted to Sidney that he is their mother's third killer, Roman reveals that he masterminded Maureen's murder by allying with Billy Loomis, thus making him the overall architect of the Ghostface spree. Harboring a grudge against Sidney and believing that she has the life and fame that he was denied because of his being a child of rape, Roman now tries to kill her, and he engages in a vicious fight with Sidney after she denounces him for his motives, telling him that contrary to what he thinks, it's Roman's own fault that he chose to kill people. In the end, Roman is ultimately outsmarted and beaten by Sidney, and is killed by Dewey Riley (sparing Sidney from committing fratricide), and thus, relieving him from the misery of his existence, and Sidney takes no pleasure from her half-brother's death.[19]

In Scream VI, the new Ghostface is leaving behind masks from past killers. After Dr. Stone is murdered in his home, Ghostface leaves Bridger's mask used in the third film. While Detective Bailey and Kirby are investigating, they have all of the killers photos on a board with when they died and which mask was left where. Roman's picture can be seen above "Death: 2000".

Foley was announced as part of the cast of Scream 7. It is implied that he will reprise his role as Roman (in one form or another), though Foley stated that he'll be playing a small role in the film.[50]

Sarah Darling

[edit]

Sarah Darling is an actress starring in Stab 3. She receives a phone call from someone claiming to be Roman Bridger (later revealed to actually be him), the director of that film, but after the call turns sinister she attempts to conceal herself among a set of film prop Ghostface costumes. However, one of the costumes is being worn by the killer, who attacks and murders Sarah, leaving a picture of the young Maureen Prescott on her corpse.[19]

Steven Stone

[edit]

Steven Stone is Jennifer Jolie's bodyguard. While guarding her home, he inspects Dewey Riley's trailer, which is kept on her land. While there he receives a phone call from someone claiming to be Dewey, who is later revealed to be Ghostface using a voice synthesizer to imitate Dewey's voice. Stone is attacked and killed by Ghostface.

Tom Prinze

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Matt Keeslar
  • Appeared in: Scream 3
  • Status: Deceased

Tom Prinze is an actor in Stab 3, playing the role of Dewey Riley. At night in Jennifer Jolie's house, Tom, Jennifer, Dewey and Gale Weathers are attacked by Ghostface. The killer begins faxing them pages of script detailing the immediate events. As there is a power cut in the house, Tom attempts to illuminate the pages with his lighter, unaware of gas leaking into the house, causing an explosion that kills him.[19]

Tyson Fox

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Deon Richmond
  • Appeared in: Scream 3
  • Status: Deceased

Tyson Fox is an actor in Stab 3, playing the role of Ricky, the Stab 3 equivalent of Randy Meeks, following backlash of his death in Stab 2. While attending the birthday party of Roman Bridger, he is attacked, stabbed, and thrown over a balcony to his death.[19]

Introduced in Scream 4

[edit]

Scream 4 is the fourth film in the Scream series. On the fifteenth anniversary of the Woodsboro massacre depicted in Scream, Sidney Prescott returns to the town to promote her new self-help book, "Out of Darkness", about her overcoming the attacks and the deaths in her life. The fictional "Stab" series of horror films based on her life have continued to be produced and have become increasingly popular. In Scream 4, Woodsboro is attacked by a new Ghostface, who recreates the original Woodsboro killings from Scream. Ghostface targets Sidney, her cousin Jill Roberts, and Jill's friends. As the killings occur, Gale Weathers-Riley struggles to reestablish her journalistic career, while working on her strained marriage to Dewey Riley, now promoted to Sheriff.

Anthony Perkins

[edit]

Deputy Anthony Perkins (credited simply as "Deputy Perkins") is a member of the Woodsboro police, who is assigned to guard Jill Roberts, Kirby Reed and Sidney Prescott after threats from Ghostface. While patrolling the grounds of Jill's home, he and his partner are attacked and stabbed to death by Ghostface. Perkins pulls a prank on Hoss, before Hoss is stabbed from behind, then Perkins is stabbed in the head. Hoss refers to him as "Anthony" when he plays dead, a nod to actor Anthony Perkins, who portrayed Norman Bates in Psycho (1960).

Shortly before he drops to his death, he is still living, despite being impaled in the skull with a knife; this was based on a real-life story that Wes Craven heard about, from a man who took himself to the E.R after being stabbed in the head.

Anderson replaces Rutina Wesley who was intended to portray Marcie Perkins until budget cuts prevented it.[26]

Ross Hoss

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Adam Brody
  • Appeared in: Scream 4
  • Status: Deceased

Deputy Ross Hoss is a "rookie" member of the Woodsboro police, who is assigned to guard Jill Roberts, Kirby Reed and Sidney Prescott after threats from Ghostface. While patrolling the grounds of Jill's home, he and his partner are attacked and stabbed to death by Ghostface, after his partner Perkins pulls a prank on him. His wife is pregnant with his child at the time of his death.[26]

Charlie Walker

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Rory Culkin
  • Appeared in: Scream 4, and Scream VI (photo only)
  • Status: Deceased

Charles "Charlie" Walker is a student at Woodsboro High School, friend of Robbie Mercer, love interest of Kirby Reed and an avid fan of horror films, particularly the "Stab" series. He runs a film club with Robbie, and the pair are recruited by Gale Weathers-Riley to help profile the killer. He hosts a large-scale viewing of the seven "Stab" films in a remote area, and later attends an after-party at Kirby's house. Ghostface attacks the party and Charlie is captured and bound to a chair. Kirby is forced to answer horror film trivia questions to save his life. Believing she has won, Kirby frees Charlie, but he stabs her in the stomach and confesses to being the killer, angry with her for not returning his affections in the years they had known each other, before leaving her for dead. Charlie is revealed to have an accomplice, Jill Roberts, with whom he is in a romantic relationship. Charlie admits to aiding Jill in order to become the new generation Randy Meeks to her Sidney Prescott. Jill instead betrays him and stabs him through the heart, killing him.[26]

11 years later, Kirby is an FBI agent and visits New York where the latest Ghostface has struck. She shows her wounds Charlie gave her from her attack and later can be seen observing the knife used on her in the Stab shrine. Also a photo of Charlie and all other killers can be seen while Kirby is investigating with Detective Bailey.

Jenny Randall

[edit]

Jenny Randall is a student at Woodsboro High. After watching Stab 7, Jenny pranks Marnie by pretending to be Ghostface. However, Marnie is then attacked and killed by the real Ghostface. Ghostface calls Jenny, taunting her, and Jenny assumes it is Trevor, Jill's ex-boyfriend, suggesting a connection between the two. The killer then chases Jenny through the house, wounding her and crushing her back as she tries to crawl under an automatic garage door, before stabbing her to death.

The next day, Jill gets a call from Jenny's phone in front of Olivia and Kirby, using the Ghostface voice. At Sidney's book signing, the knife used to kill her makes Sidney a material witness to the crime, as Jenny and Marnie's phones are found in Sidney's rental. The film highlights Trevor's infidelity and a small suggestion is Trevor may have cheated on Jill with Jenny. When Jill is revealed as the killer, she expresses rage over Trevor cheating on her.[26]

The PPV version of the film released to streaming in some countries re-dubs some of Olivia's lines, calling Jenny "the other woman" in the car on the way to school, making her murder much more obvious in how personal it may have been.

Wes Craven expressed disappointment in the removal of Jenny and Marnie's crime scene aftermath/autopsy scene, which was to occur sometime after the title card appeared. In the scene, the Woodsboro remake theme became apparent. The scene features Sheriff Dewey Riley (David Arquette), Deputy Sheriff Judy Hicks (Marley Shelton), the other cops and Craven himself in a coroner cameo, discussing leads, bodily fluid samples, the murder weapon, and explanations for why the girls were home alone. Jenny is tied to a chair like Steven Orth, while Marnie's corpse is hung to the ceiling fan like Casey Becker (Drew Barrymore) is hung from the tree in the original opening scene.

The deletion was administered by Bob Weinstein for pacing reasons. While Craven was susceptible to other deleted scenes, he felt the removal of this scene made the remake theme less apparent. Craven further stated, "For whatever reason he felt it wasn't important or necessary. We argued a long time for it. Our working relationship is give and take. He technically has final cut."[51]

Marnie Cooper

[edit]

Marnie Cooper is the shyer, more reserved best friend of Jenny. She is a student at Woodsboro High, who is critical of Stab 6 and Stab 7 due to the movie-within-a-movie format seeming illogical. She is the audience surrogate in order for viewers to be explained by Jenny what the fake-out openings meant. When Jenny claims to hear a noise, Marnie immediately suspects she is about to prank her, a regular occurrence. When she comes upstairs, Jenny calls Marnie in the Ghostface voice through an app, and scares her, before she reveals it is her speaking through an app. However, Marnie croaks, and the phone shuts off, indicating something has happened to her.

Jenny investigates. Her window is smashed open, and Marnie's corpse falls through, and Jenny is killed moments later. The next day, unbeknown that she has died, Olivia Morris refers to her as "Marnie the Carnie" when she tells Jill that she got a call from her earlier in the morning using the Ghostface voice, indicating animosity between the two. At Sidney's book signing, the knife used to kill her makes Sidney a material witness to the crime, as Jenny and Marnie's phones are found in Sidney's rental. The climax reveals Charlie killed her, and shows footage of Marnie's stabbing to Sidney.[26] The stabbing scene is the first time a character's death is shown, after they are murdered. The scene is from the original shot opening where Marnie is the primary target in the attack, not Jenny, after Jenny is stabbed on the couch and Marnie assumes it is a prank. The scene was available for viewing on the DVD for Scream 4.[52]

A crime scene aftermath scene was shot and famously photographed as a promotional image for the film in 2010. It depicts Marnie hung from a ceiling fan at the Randall household, where the cops photograph the crime scene. Dewey asks them to take Marnie's corpse down. Later, Judy Hicks provides an explanation for why they are home-alone, with Marnie's parents assuming Jenny's parents were at home, while they were away. Against director Wes Craven's wishes, Bob Weinstein who had greater creative power, deleted the scene in the editing room, which was critical to highlight the remake theme. Craven expressed disappointment with this decision, arguing with Weinstein about it.[51] He stated that the remake "was a huge theme" that was sadly "minimized throughout the editing process".[53]

Jill Roberts

[edit]
Roberts was required to dye her natural blonde hair dark and wear extensions to portray Sidney's cousin Jill in the fourth movie.
  • Portrayed by Emma Roberts
  • Appeared in: Scream 4, and Scream VI (photo only)
  • Status: Deceased

Jill Roberts is a student at Woodsboro High School, cousin of Sidney Prescott and Roman Bridger, the daughter of Kate Roberts, and the niece of Maureen and Neil Prescott. Before the events of the film, she ends her relationship with her boyfriend Trevor Sheldon after he cheats on her. She and her friends, Kirby Reed and Olivia Morris, are targeted by the new Ghostface, resulting in their gaining police protection. Jill sneaks away from the protection to Kirby's house for a party. Ghostface attacks the party, murdering some of the attendees before being revealed as Charlie Walker. Following this reveal, Jill reveals herself as the other Ghostface and the mastermind behind the murders, as she and Charlie capture Sidney.

Envious of Sidney's fame and tired of living in her shadow, Jill wants to become the new "Sidney Prescott" by recreating the events that made Sidney famous. Jill murders Trevor for cheating on her, betrays Charlie by stabbing him through the heart, mainly because she didn't want to share the spotlight, and stabs Sidney in the stomach. Believing that the witnesses to her crimes are all dead, Jill plants evidence framing Trevor and Charlie for the murder spree. Jill then intentionally harms herself to appear to be the lone survivor of the Ghostface attacks. After being taken to the hospital, Jill discovers that Sidney has survived her wounds, ruining her plan. An enraged Jill again attempts to kill Sidney, but Sidney, aided by Dewey Riley, Gale Weathers-Riley and Judy Hicks, ultimately beat her and eventually kills Jill by shooting her in the chest, while her plan to become the new "Sidney Prescott" also collapses.[26]

Jill's photo can be seen on an investigation board as Kirby (now FBI) and Detective Bailey investigate the new Ghostface killer (Scream VI). The new killer also leaves behind old masks used in past killings and the one used by Jill and Charlie gets left after Sam and Tara are attacked at a bodega. Jill's outfit she wore while at Kirby's in the final act can also be seen in the Ghostface shrine.

Ashley Greene was considered for the role of Jill before Emma Roberts was cast.[54]

Judy Hicks

[edit]
Shelton stars in the fourth and fifth films.
  • Portrayed by Marley Shelton
  • Appeared in: Scream 4, and Scream (2022)
  • Status: Deceased

Judy Hicks is Deputy Sheriff of Woodsboro under Sheriff Dewey Riley and a former classmate of Sidney Prescott. She idolizes Dewey but dislikes his wife Gale Weathers-Riley. The two are able to put aside their differences in the end, when Judy saves Gale from being shot by Jill Roberts. She is then shot herself, but is unharmed, as she is wearing a bulletproof vest.[26]

In the fifth entry, Judy is promoted to Sheriff. Her son, Wes Hicks, is introduced (a name tribute to series veteran director Wes Craven who died in 2015), portrayed by Dylan Minnette. She is subsequently murdered along with Wes at her home.

A deleted scene for Scream (2022) reunited Woodsboro cops, Dewey and Judy in person for Scream (2022), but it was cut to give Arquette's character a better introduction and for the audience to spend more time with the newer characters.[55]

Lake Bell was given the role of Judy, but she dropped out only four days before filming was to begin, citing scheduling conflicts.[56] Hicks is Shelton's first role she has been asked to reprise, and she is also the first sequel performer to star in another sequel.[57]

Kate Roberts

[edit]

Kate Roberts is the mother of Jill Roberts, aunt to Sidney Prescott, sister to Maureen Prescott, and the sister-in-law of Neil Prescott. After Kate and Sidney are attacked by Ghostface, Kate, leaning against a door, is stabbed in the back through a mail slot and dies.[26]

Lauren Graham was originally cast in the role of Kate Roberts but left the production a few days into principal photography, being replaced with McDonnell.[58][59]

Kirby Reed

[edit]
Panettiere received a positive critical response to her role as Kirby Reed.
  • Portrayed by Hayden Panettiere
  • Appeared in: Scream 4, Scream (2022) (photograph only), and Scream VI[60]
  • Status: Alive

Kirby Reed is a Woodsboro teenager, friend of Jill Roberts and Olivia Morris, love interest of Charlie Walker and an avid fan of horror films. While entertaining friends at a party, she begins to pursue Charlie romantically. Ghostface attacks the party and she retreats into the basement with Sidney. Ghostface captures Charlie and forces Kirby to play a game to save his life. When she believes she has won, she unties Charlie, who then stabs her in the stomach and reveals that he is the killer, blaming her because she had not returned his affections sooner.[26] After Scream 4, she became a fan favorite and a frequent topic of debate as to whether or not she survived her stabbings.

In Scream (2022), a visual clue reveals that Kirby survived her injuries and participated in an interview about the attacks, making her the sole survivor of the 2011 killing spree, although her whereabouts are unknown.[61] In May 2022, Panettiere officially signed on to be a cast member in the upcoming 2023 film Scream VI, indicating Kirby's return.[62]

In Scream VI, Kirby returns as an FBI agent investigating the latest Ghostface killings in New York City. She is revealed to have known Sam when they were both in high school, Sam having been a freshman when Kirby was a senior.

Olivia Morris

[edit]

Olivia Morris is a Woodsboro teenager and a friend of Jill Roberts and Kirby Reed. Following a new series of Ghostface murders, she is attacked by Ghostface in her home and disemboweled while her friends are forced to watch from the neighboring house.[26]

Rebecca Walters

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Alison Brie
  • Appeared in: Scream 4
  • Status: Deceased

Rebecca Walters is Sidney Prescott's secretary and publicist, who helps arrange Sidney's visit to Woodsboro to promote her book. Sidney fires her after Rebecca attempts to capitalize on the new Ghostface murders to increase sales of Sidney's book. While returning to her car, Rebecca is taunted and attacked by Ghostface. She is stabbed to death and her body is thrown from the top of a parking garage, landing on a news van in front of a crowd of reporters.[26]

Robbie Mercer

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Erik Knudsen
  • Appeared in: Scream 4
  • Status: Deceased

Robert "Robbie" Mercer is a Woodsboro teenager, a friend of Charlie Walker and an avid fan of horror films, running a film club with Charlie. While attending Kirby Reed's party, he is attacked by Ghostface and fatally wounded, living long enough to warn Sidney Prescott, Jill and Kirby before dying.[26]

Trevor Sheldon

[edit]

Trevor Sheldon is a Woodsboro teenager and the ex-boyfriend of Jill Roberts, who ended her relationship with him after he took her virginity and then cheated on her with Jenny Randall. He makes repeated attempts to earn her forgiveness and continue their relationship. After Ghostface's victims receive calls from Trevor's cellphone, which he claims to have lost, he becomes a suspect in the murders. He attends Kirby Reed's house party, claiming to have been invited by phone, but the guests deny responsibility. When the true Ghostface killers are unmasked as Charlie Walker and Jill, they reveal a bound Trevor, whom they plan to frame for their crimes. Jill shoots him in the crotch for cheating on her, before executing him by shooting him in the head.[26]

Tortorella auditioned five times to secure the role of Trevor by reenacting a scene from Scream where the character of Billy Loomis reveals he is one of the killers.[63]

Introduced in Scream (2022)

[edit]

Sam Carpenter

[edit]

Samantha "Sam" Carpenter is a young woman from Woodsboro who now lives in Modesto, California with her boyfriend, Richie Kirsch. She is the older sister of Tara Carpenter, and former babysitter of Wes Hicks. After discovering her real father is Billy Loomis when she was thirteen, Sam had a troubled adolescence before leaving her family and Woodsboro at eighteen, fearing that she would become a psychotic killer since. Upon receiving a call from Wes about Tara's attack, Sam returns to Woodsboro after five years with Richie to be with Tara as she recovers. At the hospital, she is attacked by Ghostface and begins experiencing hallucinations of her father. She eventually tells Tara her secret, which creates tension between the two. After rescuing Tara from a second attack, Sam decides to leave for Modesto again with both Richie and Tara. When Tara realizes she is missing her inhaler, the trio stops at Amber's house to retrieve a spare. There, Richie stabs her, revealing himself to be one of the killers alongside Amber and Tara's attacker. He tries to kill Sam but she overpowers him and kills him by slitting his throat. She then thanks Sidney and Gale before leaving for the hospital with Tara.

The sixth movie reveals that Sam and Tara are no longer in contact with their mother, after Sam was disowned for revealing the truth about her parentage to Tara, and Tara subsequently disowned their mother as a result. Sam also followed Tara to New York City out of fear for her safety, and the two move in with Quinn Bailey while Sam takes up a number of jobs to support them financially. She is also publicly ostracized following a string of conspiracy theories framing her for the Woodsboro murders, attends therapy frequently with Dr. Stone, and enters a secret relationship with her neighbor Danny Brackett. When Ghostface returns and murders a pair of students, Sam's driver's license was found at the scene, but her appointment with her therapist gives her an unbeatable alibi. She is asked to come with Tara to the police station, but the two are attacked by Ghostface in a bodega. They team up with FBI agent Kirby Reed (a former survivor of Ghostface herself) and are taken to an abandoned theater, transformed into a shrine for Ghostface killers. After Gale is attacked by Ghostface, Sam, Tara, Kirby and Chad decide to use the shrine to lure Ghostface into a trap. While there, Sam begins to reexperience hallucinations of Billy Loomis, who warns her to not trust anybody. Unfortunately, the group is locked inside, and Kirby and Chad are attacked by the Ghostfaces, who reveal themselves to be Wayne Bailey and his children, Ethan Landry and Quinn, who faked her death earlier and was the one who started the conspiracy theories to ruin Sam's image. They reveal themselves to be Richie's surviving family and intend to frame Sam and Tara for the murders. After they start fighting, Sam and Tara are able to gain the upper hand as they kill Quinn and subdue Ethan respectively. Sam uses the voice changer to mock Wayne before ambushing him in a Ghostface costume and finally kills him. After Kirby kills Ethan, they all receive medical treatment and Kirby advises Sam to call her anytime, as Sam agrees to let Tara live independently and stares at her father's mask before discarding it on the street and leaving the scene with Tara.

Tara Carpenter

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Jenna Ortega
  • Appeared in: Scream (2022), and Scream VI[64]
  • Status: Alive

Tara Carpenter is a Woodsboro teenager and the younger sister of Sam Carpenter. Her friend group includes Amber Freeman, Wes Hicks and Chad and Mindy Meeks-Martin. She is the first target of the new Ghostface, though she survives the attack. She prefers elevated horror rather than typical slashers, citing the films Hereditary and The Babadook as some of her favorites. Tara is initially excited to see her sister after five years, but grows distant when Sam reveals her biological father is Billy Loomis. After she is attacked again at the hospital, Sam decides to bring Tara back to Modesto with her and Richie. As they leave Woodsboro, Tara realizes she is missing her inhaler, but remembers she left a spare at Amber's house. Upon arriving, Amber ends the memorial party in honor of Wes Hicks and goes with Tara to retrieve the inhaler. After revealing herself to be the killer, Amber ties up Tara in her closet. She is eventually found by Sam, who unties her. After fatally shooting a still-alive, badly burnt Amber, who was rushing at Sidney, Sam and Gale to stab them, Tara is loaded into an ambulance. Requesting that Sam ride with her, the two leave the scene.

Following the events of the fifth installment, Tara enrolls at Blackmore University and moves to New York City with Sam, who helicopters her much to Tara's annoyance. She is also revealed to have cut off her mother in support of Sam after she was cut off for revealing the truth about her paternity to Tara. Following a party that resulted in Sam tasing a student in the testicles for attempting to take advantage of Tara, Tara lashes out at Sam and pleads for her independence. Shortly after, she is taken care of by Chad, and the two almost kiss before being interrupted by Tara's roommate Quinn. When Sam and Tara head to the police station for some questioning about Ghostface's return, the two are attacked by the masked killer and escape into a bodega. Kirby Reed, a former Ghostface survivor and an FBI agent, arrives and agrees to help them stop Ghostface. Following another attack at their apartment that results in Quinn having her throat slit, the group uses an abandoned theater to lure Ghostface into a trap and stop him. While waiting, Chad kisses Tara, who reciprocates, though the two are attacked by Ghostface afterwards. Tara is able to escape, but witnesses Chad being stabbed repeatedly, devastating her. Sam and Tara are confronted by Wayne Bailey, Ethan Landry and a still-alive Quinn, who reveal themselves as the Ghostfaces. The two sisters are attacked but are soon able to gain the upper hand, which results in Tara stabbing Ethan in the mouth. Following the ordeal, Tara receives medical treatment for her wounds and expresses sadness over Chad's apparent death. Luckily, Chad is wheeled out of the theater, having survived the attack, much to Tara's relief, and they kiss once more before he is taken to the hospital. After Sam states she will let Tara be more independent, Tara says she will to go to therapy to seek help and walks off with her sister into the city.

Richie Kirsch

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Jack Quaid
  • Appeared in: Scream (2022), and Scream VI (archive footage)
  • Status: Deceased

Richie Kirsch is introduced in Scream (2022) as Sam Carpenter's boyfriend and coworker of six months at a bowling alley in Modesto, California. When she learns her sister Tara was attacked and hospitalized, he goes with her to Woodsboro for emotional support. After Sam is attacked in the hospital by Ghostface, he overhears her tell Tara she (Sam) is Billy Loomis' illegitimate daughter, but decides to stay with her. He goes with her to seek out Dewey Riley, who warns her that, as her boyfriend, he's high on the list of suspects. He's also there when she speaks to Tara's friends. He later finds Tara being attacked by Ghostface and is mildly injured. Sam and Dewey arrive and, while Richie and the girls escape, Dewey is killed. Afterwards, they meet Sidney and, despite her warnings, decide to leave. On the way out, Tara realizes she lost her inhaler and Sam convinces Richie to go to Amber's house to get her spare. When they learn Ghostface is there, Sam is suspicious of Richie, though he warns her it could be Tara. After Sidney arrives, she and Sam subdue Ghostface, only for Richie to stab Sam, revealing himself as a killer, the other being Amber. They take them and the wounded Gale captive and reveal their plan: to make a real life reboot of "Stab" with Sam, as Billy's daughter, framed as the killer. Richie also stole Tara's inhaler so they would fall into his trap. However, they learn Tara is free (Richie's attempt to sow distrust in Sam failed), distracting them long enough for Sidney and Gale to deal with Amber while Sam fights Richie. She ultimately gets a knife and stabs him many times with it, and as a wounded and now-frightened Richie cowardly pleads for his life and asks about "his ending", Sam gives him his "ending" by slitting his throat, and then empties a gun taken from Gale into his corpse to be sure he is dead.

In Scream VI, he is seen again in footage of his Stab fan film saved by his father Wayne and siblings Quinn and Ethan, who collectively elect to avenge his death as Ghostface, to which Sam taunts them over most of Richie's "victims" having survived their wounds, with the majority to have died having been killed by Amber, and for Richie having exposed himself to be a helpless coward before she killed him.

Amber Freeman

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Mikey Madison
  • Appeared in: Scream (2022), and Scream VI (photo only)
  • Status: Deceased

Amber Freeman is a Woodsboro teenager and friend to Tara Carpenter, Wes Hicks, Chad Meeks-Martin, Mindy Meeks-Martin, and Liv McKenzie in Scream (2022). She is seen being threatened by Ghostface during Tara's attack. After Tara's attack, she and the rest of the teenagers go visit her in the hospital along with Tara's older sister Sam and her boyfriend, Richie Kirsch. She and the teenagers are kicked out of a bar, where Liv's summer fling Vince Schneider is killed by Ghostface. After Wes is murdered, she and the teens plan a party at her house to honor his memory. During this, Amber shoots Liv in the head and kills her after revealing herself as the killer. Amber shoots Gale and Richie reveals himself as her accomplice, taking Gale, Sidney, Sam, and Tara captive. She reveals that they were disappointed at the last Stab movie and wish to revive the franchise with a new killing spree to act as "source material" and break away from the "toxic fandom" label they feel they have unjustly received. Amber is killed after she is shot by Gale and lit on fire, burning alive while screaming, and is subsequently shot in the head by Tara.

In Scream VI, Amber is revealed to have committed the majority of the murders in Scream (2022), with all but one of Richie's attempts at killing having failed.

Mindy Meeks-Martin

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Jasmin Savoy Brown
  • Appears in Scream (2022), Scream VI,[64] and Scream 7 (upcoming)
  • Status: Alive

Mindy Meeks-Martin is a Woodsboro teenager and the fraternal twin sister of Chad. Through her mother, Martha, she is Randy Meeks's niece. Like her uncle, she is an avid horror fan. At the memorial party for Wes, she is attacked by Ghostface while watching Stab, mirroring the attack on Randy twenty-five years ago. After the killers are stopped, both Chad and Mindy are revealed to have survived and awaiting medical treatment.

The sixth movie details the group's lives in New York City, where Mindy has enrolled at Blackmore University and is in a relationship with Anika Kayoko. Upon Ghostface's return, Mindy shares her theories that they are in a "sequel to the requel", and states that nobody is safe from Ghostface. Shortly after, the group is attacked by Ghostface, and Anika is killed, leaving Mindy devastated. The group team up with Kirby Reed and decide to lure Ghostface to a trap at an abandoned movie theater turned shrine for the infamous killer. However, while on the way there, Mindy is stabbed by Ghostface and receives medical treatment. When the ordeal is finished, Mindy has realized who the killers are, and goes to warn the others, though is annoyed to find they have been stopped and she once again missed the monologue. Mindy instead returns to the hospital to continue receiving care for her wounds.

Chad Meeks-Martin

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Mason Gooding
  • Appears in Scream (2022), Scream VI,[64] and Scream 7 (upcoming)
  • Status: Alive

Chad Meeks-Martin is a Woodsboro teenager and the fraternal twin brother of Mindy. Through his mother, Martha, he is Randy Meeks's nephew. He is an athlete at Woodsboro High and the boyfriend of Liv McKenzie. He becomes protective of Liv after Vince Schneider tries to get her back one night at the bar. At the memorial party for Wes, he refuses Liv's request to go somewhere private out of fear of going with the killer. Liv storms away and Chad chases after her using location-sharing on his phone. Believing to have found Liv, he is instead attacked by Ghostface. After the killers are stopped, both Chad and Mindy are revealed to have survived and awaiting medical treatment.

In the sixth movie, Chad is revealed to have moved to New York City along with Sam, Tara, and Mindy, and enrolls in Blackmore University and has Ethan Landry as his roommate. He and Tara are also revealed to have a mutual crush on one another, as he tends to her following a party and the two almost kiss before being interrupted by Tara's roommate Quinn. When the group is attacked by Ghostface, Chad and Tara are able to escape, and Mindy and Sam also survive the attack. The group then decides to create a trap in an abandoned movie theater to lure Ghostface in. While waiting, Chad and Tara finally kiss, but Chad is stabbed and left for dead by a duo of Ghostfaces. Following the ordeal, Chad is revealed to have survived and Tara kisses him once more before he is taken to the hospital.

Liv McKenzie

[edit]

Olivia "Liv" McKenzie is a Woodsboro teenager and the girlfriend of Chad Meeks-Martin. She previously had a summer fling with Vince Schneider. At the memorial party for Wes, Liv becomes angry with Chad over his perceived mistrust of her. She leaves the house and returns later to find his body outside after being attacked. Panicked, she rushes inside to discuss the killer's identity with the remaining guests. In the ensuing argument, in which Amber accuses Liv of being the killer, Liv is shot in the head and killed by Amber who revealed herself as one of the killers.

Wes Hicks

[edit]

Wesley "Wes" Hicks is a Woodsboro teenager and is also Sheriff Judy Hicks' son. He goes to Woodsboro High and is part of the friend group. He calls Sam and tells her about Tara's attack and is worried that the killer will target him and his mother due to Judy having a part in solving the previous killings. As he is preparing the table for dinner, Wes hears strange noises in the house. He goes to lock the front door for safety but is then attacked by Ghostface. He tries to hold off the knife but the killer forces it through his throat, killing him.

Vince Schneider

[edit]
  • Portrayed by Kyle Gallner
  • Appeared in: Scream (2022)
  • Status: Deceased

Vincent "Vince" Schneider is a resident of Woodsboro and had a summer fling with Liv McKenzie. After spending the night at the bar, he is murdered by Ghostface in a nearby alley, becoming the true first victim. When the group discusses potential suspects at the twins' house, it is revealed that Vince is the nephew of Stu Macher through his mother, Leslie.

Introduced in Scream VI

[edit]

Anika Kayoko

[edit]

Anika Kayoko is shown to attend Blackmore University and is the girlfriend of Mindy. While being attacked by Ghostface in Sam and Tara's apartment, Anika is choked and then stabbed in the abdomen before escaping to a bedroom with Mindy and Sam. While trying to escape across a ladder into an adjacent apartment, Ghostface breaks into the room and violently shakes the ladder Anika is trying to cross while Mindy, Sam & Danny try to rescue her. Ghostface manages to shake the ladder enough, causing Anika to violently fall to her death.

Dr. Christopher Stone

[edit]

Dr. Christopher Stone, simply referred to as Dr. Stone, appears as Sam's therapist who she has been visiting to deal with her traumatic experience in Woodsboro. It is revealed that Sam has been withholding details of her past and when she finally reveals the events that took place and her satisfaction in killing Richie, he is shown to be apprehensive of her and admits that he will have to inform the police of her admission. Stone is then later murdered at his house the following day by Ghostface, who stabs him through the nose and steals Sam's file from his records.

Danny Brackett

[edit]

Danny Brackett is shown to live in the apartment opposite Sam and Tara. He and Sam are revealed to be in a secret relationship after making out in the hallway. When Sam and her friends are being attacked and chased in the apartment, Danny is able to extend a ladder through his open window over to Sam's apartment for them to climb over. He manages to help Sam and Mindy climb over, but is unable to save Anika. Danny is then shown on his way to the Ghostface shrine where Sam and Tara plan on luring the killer to then execute him. Sam tells Danny to keep away as she cannot trust him for sure and also doesn't want him to be hurt. He is then seen at the end of the movie, reuniting with Sam once Ghostface has been stopped.

Ethan Landry

[edit]

Ethan Landry is shown to be a freshman at Blackmore University and is roommates with Chad Meeks-Martin. After the group are attacked at Sam and Tara's apartment and Anika is killed, Mindy and Chad suspect Ethan is responsible. However, Ethan swears he was attending class on campus with numerous others, thereby exonerating him. When the group are later trying to board a subway carriage, Mindy and Ethan are cut off from the others and have to wait for the next train to arrive. Mindy keeps her distance from Ethan, still suspicious of his whereabouts from the night before and once they board the next train, keeps clear of him. Mindy is then stabbed by Ghostface, who has followed her on the subway, and Ethan rushes to her aid before calling for help. During the finale at the Ghostface shrine, Ethan is later unmasked as one of the killers along with Detective Wayne, who is revealed to be his father and Quinn Bailey, his sister. It's also revealed that "Ethan Landry" is not even his real name and that Richie Kirsch was Ethan's oldest brother, the family now seeking revenge on Sam for the "brutality" she took in killing him. Ethan tries to attack Tara, who is hanging from a railing above, trying to climb up but cannot do so. Tara then manages to arm herself with a knife and drops down, crashing onto Ethan who manages to stab her once, but just as Ethan gloats, Tara quickly manages to violently stab him in the mouth, presumably killing him. He is later shown to still be alive but is promptly killed by Kirby Reed, who drops a television on his head.

Jason Carvey and Greg Bruckner

[edit]

Jason Carvey is first seen in the opening sequence after revealing himself to be the Ghostface who has just murdered college professor Laura Crane, after catfishing her as "Reggie". It is revealed that Jason, along with his roommate Greg Bruckner, had been planning to finish creating the "movie" that Richie Kirsch set out to make the year previously by killing the Carpenter sisters. After murdering Laura, Jason returns to his apartment where he is taunted by another Ghostface, pretending to be Greg over the phone. Jason is lured to his refrigerator by the new Ghostface, where he discovers Greg's dismembered body before being brutally stabbed and murdered by Ghostface.

Laura Crane

[edit]

Laura Crane is a film studies professor at Blackmore University in New York City. She is first shown in a bar waiting for an online date, Reggie, to arrive. When Reggie contacts her, looking for directions on how to reach her, she leaves the bar and heads to an empty alleyway where she believes she has found him only for Reggie to reveal himself as Ghostface, who jumps out from the darkness and viciously stabs her to death. Ghostface then unmasks himself to be Jason Carvey, one of Laura's film students who had plotted to murder her with his friend, Greg, after catfishing her online. Jason later described his pleasure at murdering Laura in great detail to "Greg" on the phone, before finding Greg dead and being murdered by another Ghostface himself.

Quinn Bailey

[edit]

Quinn Bailey is Tara's roommate, who also attends Blackmore University. Her father is Detective Wayne, who she reveals followed her to New York when she began attending college, after the death of her brother prior. She is shown to be a sex-positive young woman who has numerous male partners over in her apartment. Quinn's bedroom window looks directly opposite Danny Brackett's apartment, where he witnesses Ghostface standing over her while she lies in bed on the phone oblivious to her surroundings. Danny tries to alert Quinn and eventually gets through to Sam, who is in the kitchen, when he sends video footage of Ghostface stabbing Quinn. The others in the apartment then gather in the living room where Quinn's body is thrown through the door, showing her throat has also been slashed. After Detective Wayne is revealed to be one of the three Ghostface killers, he also reveals that Quinn had faked her death and is in fact one of his accomplices, along with her brother Ethan. It is also revealed that Richie Kirsch was Quinn's other brother and the family are now seeking revenge on Sam for killing him, with Quinn revealed to be the one who started the rumors that aimed to defame Sam online. During the finale at the Ghostface shrine, Quinn finds Sam above and gleefully prepares to kill her, only for Sam to let go of Tara and grab a gun, and Quinn becomes horrified as Tara stabs her brother Ethan below. Sam taunts Quinn that she has lost "another brother", provoking an enraged Quinn to desperately try to attack her, but Sam shoots Quinn in the forehead before she can even reach her, killing her instantly.

Wayne Bailey

[edit]

Detective Wayne Bailey is a detective investigating the latest Ghostface killings in New York City.[64][65] Detective Bailey is shown as the father of Quinn Bailey, who works for the NYPD and is assigned to work on the case following the recent Ghostface attacks. He works with Kirby Reed, who is now an FBI agent to try and track down the killer.

Wayne is shown visibly upset after his daughter has been murdered, following an attack at Sam and Tara's apartment and reveals he has been removed from the case. He then teams with Sam to help kill whoever is behind the Ghostface mask, as revenge for his murdered daughter. During the finale, Wayne contacts Sam and reveals that Kirby had been previously fired from the FBI due to delusions regarding her previous attack and that she has trapped them in the Ghostface shrine. Once he arrives at the shrine, he shoots Kirby and reveals himself as the mastermind behind the Ghostface killings, with his son Ethan and daughter, a still alive Quinn, who he helped fake her death. Wayne reveals that Richie Kirsch was his eldest son and he, along with Ethan and Quinn, seeks revenge against Sam for killing him, while it is also revealed he supported Richie's obsessions to the Ghostface killings and movies despite not liking them himself. Wayne's schemes for revenge fail as Sam and Tara get the upper hand, with Wayne losing his composure as Sam and Tara take down his two children. Sam then turns the Ghostface trick on Wayne by taunting him with a phone call using the voice changer and violently stabbing Wayne multiple times while dressed in her father's Ghostface mask and costume, all while Wayne exposes himself to be a helpless coward like Richie. Sam then states that she is better than her father and other killers no matter what Wayne thinks, and Wayne believes that Sam will not kill him and thanks her, only for Sam to kill Wayne by stabbing him through the eye, stating that he "did mess with her family".

Reception

[edit]

Neve Campbell praised the role of Sidney Prescott, saying she "adored" the character and "she's a fantastic character for any kind of movie."[71] In 1997, the Scream role won Campbell the Saturn Award for Best Actress[35] and an MTV Movie Award for Best Female Performance nomination.[72] The following year she went on to win the 1998 Best Female Performance for Scream 2[36] and received a second nomination for the Saturn Award for Best Actress, losing to Jodie Foster for Contact (1997).[73] She received a third and final Best Female Performance nomination from MTV in 2000 for the character in Scream 3, but lost to fellow Scream alum Sarah Michelle Gellar for Cruel Intentions (1999).[74][75]

Barrymore and Ulrich also received Saturn Award nominations in 1997 for Scream, for Best Supporting Actress and Best Supporting Actor respectively.[22] Although critical of the film itself, Variety singled out Campbell and Ulrich for praise as "charismatic", liking Cox's playing against type as the ambitious reporter Gale and saying the film had a "strong ensemble cast".[76]

John Muir, author of Wes Craven: The Art of Horror, was critical of the new characters introduced in Scream 2 – Derek, Joel, Cici, Hallie, Lois, Murphy and Mickey – stating that they never attained the same depth of character as Scream characters such as Tatum Riley, Billy Loomis and Stu Macher, or even minor characters like Principal Himbry. Muir cited the sequel's focus on increased body counts and violence as the cause of this discrepancy in the quality of the two films' characters. He added that, as a result, Scream 2 lacked the same mystery or intrigue as the original, as the killer could be any character, purely because the audience is never provided with enough information to form an opinion of them. Roger Ebert agreed with this criticism, saying "there is no way to guess who's doing the killing, and everyone who seems suspicious is (almost) sure to be innocent."[77]

However, Muir praised the development of the surviving characters of Scream, labeling Gale Weathers, Dewey Riley, Sidney Prescott, and Randy Meeks as "beloved" and claiming that the death of Randy was the most devastating moment of the sequel and a "bad move".[78] Variety's Leonard Klady was more appreciative of some of the new cast, calling Laurie Metcalf and Liev Schreiber "standout" talent.[79] Cox received a Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress nomination for her role in Scream 2, but lost to Gloria Stuart for Titanic (1997).[73]

On the characters of Scream 3, Roger Ebert was critical, stating "[the characters] are so thin, they're transparent", but he praised Neve Campbell's appearance as Sidney Prescott, saying "The camera loves her. She could become a really big star and then giggle at clips from this film at her AFI tribute".[80] The New York Times praised her role equally highly, saying "She has developed as an actress; when her eyes go dark with concern and fear, she is nerve-racked and tormented, not play-acting."[81] Harry Knowles of Ain't It Cool News was less complimentary about Campbell, saying "She adds ZERO coolness. Zero talent. And Zero charisma to [Scream 3]."[82] The BBC's Tom Coates and Elvis Mitchell of the New York Times praised Parker Posey's character, with Mitchell saying "[Jennifer Jolie] alone makes the picture worth seeing. Dizzy and nakedly – hilariously – ambitious, she's so flighty she seems to be levitating."[81][83] So well received was Posey's character that she received an MTV Movie Award for Best Comedic Performance nomination in 2000 for the role, although she lost to Adam Sandler for Big Daddy (1999).[48] Mitchell also praised the characters of Sarah Darling (McCarthy), Tyson Fox (Richmond) and Steven Stone (Warburton), calling them "assets" to the film. In 2001, as part of the American Film Institute''s AFI 100 Years... series, the character of Ghostface became one of the four hundred nominees in the "100 Heroes and Villains" category.[84]

On the characters of Scream 4, Film 4 complimented the new additions to the cast, isolating Robbie Mercer and Charlie Walker as the best of the new characters,[85] while the Los Angeles Times called Panettiere's film-nerd Kirby Reed "feisty", labeling her the most "intriguing" new addition to the series.[86]

The first season of Scream has received a mixed response from critics. On the review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes, it has a rating of 47%, based on 29 reviews, with a 5.4/10 average rating. The site's critical consensus reads, "Lacking truly compelling characters or scenarios, Scream is forced to trade too heavily on nostalgia for its big-screen predecessors in the franchise."[87] On Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating, the series has a score of 57 out of 100, based on 20 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[88]

In a positive review, David Hinckley from New York Daily News awarded the pilot four out of five stars and stated, "Happily, Scream maintains a sense of humor, reinforced with snappy, self-aware pop culture dialogue."[89] Similarly, Brian Lowry of Variety commended the show's ability to maintain suspense "without much actually happening during the rest of the episode," noting its use of music, but expressing skepticism if the series could maintain its originality.[90] Aedan Juvet of PopWrapped gave a positive assessment of the series and called it, "a prime example of a game-changing horror series."[91] Conversely, David Wiegand of the San Francisco Chronicle panned the series and gave it one out of four stars, criticizing the acting performances as "bland, robotic, and uninteresting" as well as its apparent lack of racial diversity.[92] In a mixed review, Mark Perigard of the Boston Herald gave the show a C+, saying, "There are a few scares here, but while the Scream films kept audiences jumping, Scream: The TV series risks putting viewers to sleep."[93]

Awards and nominations

[edit]

The cast of the Scream series have won, or been nominated for, several awards, most notably Campbell who has received the most wins and nominations of the cast for her role as Sidney Prescott, including the Saturn Award for Best Actress for Scream (1996) and MTV Movie Award for Best Performance for Scream 2 (1997).[94] For Scream (1996) Skeet Ulrich and Drew Barrymore received Saturn Award nominations for Best Supporting Actor.[35] Cox received a Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress nomination for her role in Scream 2 but lost to Gloria Stuart for Titanic (1997).[73] Despite her brief cameo appearance as "Sidney Prescott" in the film within a film "Stab" series, Tori Spelling was nominated for a Razzie Award for "Worst New Actress" in Scream 2.[95][73] Arquette won Blockbuster Entertainment Awards in the "Favorite Actor – Horror" and "Favorite Actor – Horror" (Internet Only) categories for his role in Scream 2 and Scream 3, and also won Teen Choice Awards for his role in Scream 3 in the "Choice Chemistry" (along with Cox) respectively.[96][97] Parker Posey's role as Jennifer Jolie received near unanimous praise from critics, with the New York Times Elvis Mitchell saying "[Posey] alone makes the picture worth seeing. Dizzy and nakedly – hilariously – ambitious, she's so flighty she seems to be levitating."[81][83] So well received was her performance that she received an MTV Movie Award for Best Comedic Performance nomination in 2000 for the role but lost to Adam Sandler for Big Daddy (1999).[48] Jenna Ortega won Most Frightened Performance at the MTV Movie & TV Awards for Scream (2022), which was also nominated for Best Movie.[98] The film series itself has been the recipient of several awards, including Best Horror Film at the Saturn Awards and the MTV Movie Award for Best Movie for Scream (1996).[99][100] Scream VI (2023) won for Best Movie (the second time a movie in the franchise has won Best Movie at the MTV Awards) and Best Fight (Courteney Cox vs Ghostface).[101][102]

Year Award Category Actor Film Result Ref.
1996 Saturn Award Best Actress Neve Campbell Scream Won [35]
Best Supporting Actor Skeet Ulrich Nominated [22]
Best Supporting Actress Drew Barrymore Nominated [22]
1997 Fangoria Chainsaw Award Best Actress Neve Campbell Won  
Best Supporting Actor Skeet Ulrich Nominated  
Best Supporting Actress Drew Barrymore Won  
MTV Movie Award Best Female Performance Neve Campbell Nominated [103]
Razzie Award Worst New Star Tori Spelling Scream 2 Nominated [95]
1998 Fangoria Chainsaw Award Best Actress Neve Campbell Nominated  
Best Supporting Actor Liev Schreiber Nominated  
Best Supporting Actress Courteney Cox Won  
Saturn Award Best Actress Neve Campbell Nominated [73]
Best Supporting Actress Courteney Cox Nominated [73]
MTV Movie Award Best Female Performance Neve Campbell Won [94]
Blockbuster Entertainment Award Favorite Actor – Horror David Arquette Won  
Favorite Actress – Horror Neve Campbell Won  
Favorite Actress – Horror Courteney Cox Nominated  
Favorite Supporting Actor – Horror Jamie Kennedy Won  
Favorite Supporting Actress – Horror Jada Pinkett-Smith Nominated  
2000 MTV Movie Award Best Comedic Performance Parker Posey Scream 3 Nominated [48]
Best Female Performance Neve Campbell Nominated [48]
2001 Blockbuster Entertainment Award Favorite Actor – Horror David Arquette Won  
Favorite Actress – Horror Neve Campbell Won  
Favorite Actress – Horror Courteney Cox Nominated  
Fangoria Chainsaw Award Best Supporting Actress Parker Posey Won  
2011 Scream Awards Best Horror Actress Neve Campbell Scream 4 Nominated  
Best Cameo Kristen Bell
Anna Paquin
Nominated  
Fright Meter Awards Best Supporting Actress Hayden Panettiere Nominated  
2022 MTV Movie & TV Awards Most Frightened Performance Jenna Ortega Scream Won [104]
2023 Best Fight Courteney Cox vs. Ghostface Scream VI Won
Fangoria Chainsaw Award Best Supporting Performance Jenna Ortega Scream Nominated  
2024 Critics' Choice Super Award Best Actress in a Horror Movie Jenna Ortega Scream VI Nominated [105]

References

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from Grokipedia
The list of Scream (film series) characters encompasses the fictional protagonists, antagonists, victims, and supporting figures appearing across the American slasher horror franchise, which includes six films released from 1996 to 2023, with a seventh film scheduled for release in 2026. Created by screenwriter Kevin Williamson and directed by Wes Craven for the first four installments, the series follows recurring survivors confronting the masked killer Ghostface in cycles of terror, often in the fictional town of Woodsboro, California, while subverting horror tropes through meta-commentary on the genre itself. At the core of the ensemble are Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell), the resilient final girl and primary target of Ghostface across multiple films; Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox), a tenacious journalist who evolves from antagonist to ally; and Dewey Riley (David Arquette), the bumbling yet heroic sheriff's deputy who provides comic relief and investigative support. Iconic one-off or limited-run characters include Casey Becker (Drew Barrymore), the franchise's shocking opening victim who sets the tone for the series; Randy Meeks (Jamie Kennedy), the horror-savvy film geek offering rules for surviving slashers; and Tatum Riley (Rose McGowan), Sidney's witty best friend and Dewey's sister. Later entries introduce new leads like Sam and Tara Carpenter (Melissa Barrera and Jenna Ortega), half-sisters connected to Sidney's past who become central survivors in the fifth and sixth films, alongside Kirby Reed (Hayden Panettiere), a resourceful film buff who returns as a key ally. The franchise's character dynamics emphasize ensemble casts of teens and adults navigating betrayal, grief, and media sensationalism, with Ghostface—voiced by Roger L. Jackson—serving as the anonymous, ever-present antagonist whose identity shifts with each story.

Overview

Casting Approach

For the original Scream (1996), director Wes Craven emphasized casting relative unknowns to subvert conventional horror archetypes and inject freshness into the genre. He specifically suggested Neve Campbell, then known primarily from television's Party of Five, to play Sidney Prescott, the resilient final girl who defies slasher expectations by actively fighting back. Campbell's co-star from The Craft, Skeet Ulrich, was similarly selected as her boyfriend Billy Loomis, allowing the film to mock tropes through unfamiliar faces rather than established stars. Subsequent films balanced returning originals with new talent to sustain the meta-narrative. In Scream 2 (1997), Craven retained core actors like Campbell while introducing rising stars Jada Pinkett Smith and Omar Epps in the opening sequence; their characters, college students debating horror movie rules, exemplified the franchise's genre-savvy commentary. This pattern continued in later sequels, prioritizing familiar performers alongside emerging actors to blend continuity with innovation, as seen in additions like Sarah Michelle Gellar and Jerry O'Connell. The post-2011 revival marked a shift toward greater diversity, reflecting broader industry trends. The fifth film (2022), directed by Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, featured Mexican actress Melissa Barrera as lead Sam Carpenter, a Latina descendant of Sidney's mother, in what became the series' most inclusive cast to date, incorporating queer characters like Mindy Meeks-Martin (Jasmin Savoy Brown) for the first time. Neve Campbell's portrayal of Sidney Prescott, the franchise's enduring survivor, anchored this evolution. Recent productions have navigated comebacks and disruptions influenced by external factors. For Scream 7 (2026), Campbell returns as Sidney after declining Scream VI over salary disputes, positioning her as the central figure once more. David Arquette reprises Dewey Riley despite the character's on-screen death in the fifth film to honor fan attachment. The October 2025 trailer, directed by Kevin Williamson, teased returns of deceased characters including Dewey and Stu Macher. However, 2023 controversies prompted significant changes: Barrera was dismissed from the project by Spyglass Media Group after social media posts accusing Israel of "genocide" in Gaza, which producers viewed as crossing into antisemitic hate speech, prompting a recast and production delays.

Character Archetypes and Themes

The "final girl" archetype, a term coined by film scholar Carol J. Clover to describe the resourceful female survivor who confronts and defeats the antagonist in slasher films, finds its quintessential embodiment in Sidney Prescott across the original Scream trilogy (1996–2000). Introduced as a grieving high schooler navigating her mother's recent death, Sidney evolves from a vulnerable victim into a hardened survivor, using intelligence and physical prowess to outmaneuver Ghostface, ultimately becoming a crisis counselor and author in later entries. This progression subverts the trope's early stereotypes of passivity and moral purity, infusing it with psychological depth and agency. In the requel films Scream (2022) and Scream VI (2023), the archetype expands through sisters Sam and Tara Carpenter, reflecting a generational shift toward familial bonds and inherited trauma. Sam, revealed as the daughter of original killer Billy Loomis, embodies a morally complex final girl—violent and self-aware, grappling with her lineage while wielding brutal force against attackers. Tara, initially a targeted ingenue akin to early victims, grows into a resilient fighter alongside her sister, highlighting a collaborative survival dynamic that moves beyond solitary heroism. This evolution critiques patriarchal underpinnings of the trope, emphasizing diverse, interconnected female strength in contemporary horror. The Ghostface killer embodies a signature dynamic of duality, with most installments featuring paired perpetrators who collaborate in taunting and stabbing victims before inevitably betraying each other. This tradition, present in five of the six films, underscores themes of deception and instability, as one killer often dominates while the other serves as an expendable accomplice. Motivations frequently revolve around revenge for personal betrayals or a pursuit of infamy through media sensationalism, transforming ordinary grievances into spectacle-driven rampages. Supporting archetypes provide contrast and levity amid the terror, enriching the franchise's ensemble. Dewey Riley functions as the comic relief deputy, a well-meaning but often hapless law enforcement figure whose repeated injuries and earnest support for survivors offer humorous counterpoint to the killings. Gale Weathers, the ambitious reporter, evolves from a opportunistic journalist chasing headlines to a tenacious ally, using her media savvy to expose truths and aid investigations. Randy Meeks serves as the horror expert, delivering meta "rules" for survival—such as avoiding sex, drugs, and isolation—that guide characters and audiences through slasher conventions. Central to the series is the thematic exploration of family trauma, rooted in Maureen Prescott's extramarital affairs and hidden past, which ignite cycles of vengeance across generations. Maureen's infidelity in Woodsboro, including with Billy Loomis's father, shatters illusions of domestic stability and directly motivates initial killings as acts of retribution. Her earlier Hollywood trauma—a gang rape leading to the birth of secret son Roman Bridger—further propagates dysfunction, as Roman's rejection fuels broader vendettas against the Prescott lineage. This generational legacy manifests in later films through inherited guilt and repeated attacks on Sidney's extended "family," illustrating how unresolved secrets perpetuate violence. Meta-elements permeate the franchise, with characters demonstrating genre awareness to critique slasher tropes from the 1996 original through Scream VI (2023). Randy Meeks's explicit "rules"—like never saying "I'll be right back"—and their updates in sequels parody clichés such as elaborate deaths and superhuman killers, allowing survivors to anticipate threats. Sidney and later protagonists like the Carpenters invoke these conventions self-referentially, subverting expectations (e.g., early star kills) while commenting on horror's evolution, from sequels to requels and true-crime obsessions. This layered satire, influenced by Wes Craven's prior meta works, dissects audience complicity and industry formulas, ensuring the series remains a reflexive commentary on its own genre.

Introduced in Scream (1996)

Casey Becker

Casey Becker is a fictional character in the Scream film series, introduced as the first victim in the 1996 slasher horror film Scream, directed by Wes Craven. Portrayed by actress Drew Barrymore, Becker is depicted as a high school student in Woodsboro, California, and the former girlfriend of Stu Macher. Her role is limited to the opening sequence of the film, where she is murdered alongside her boyfriend Steve Orth, marking the beginning of the Woodsboro killing spree. In her brief appearance, Becker establishes the franchise's signature meta-horror tone through a tense phone conversation with an anonymous caller—later revealed as Ghostface—who interrogates her on horror movie trivia while stalking her home. This scene, lasting about 12 minutes, builds suspense as Becker attempts to protect her family and boyfriend, only to be stabbed and strung up on a tree in her front yard. Barrymore, a prominent star at the time, specifically requested the role of Becker over the lead Sidney Prescott to subvert audience expectations, filming her scenes in just five days. She explained her choice as a way to "establish this rule does not apply in this film," drawing parallels to Janet Leigh's early death in Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho. Becker's demise has had significant cultural impact, redefining the "scream queen" archetype by killing off a high-profile actress in the opening act, which shocked 1990s audiences and contributed to Scream's box office success and genre revival. Screenwriter Kevin Williamson noted the intentional echo of Psycho's iconic shower scene to heighten the surprise. Becker does not appear in subsequent Scream films, though her murder remains a foundational element of the series' lore.

Principal Arthur Himbry

Principal Arthur Himbry is the principal of Woodsboro High School, serving as a stern authority figure amid the escalating murders in the town. He is portrayed by Henry Winkler in an uncredited role, bringing a gravelly-voiced intensity to the character that contrasts his more affable public persona. Himbry appears exclusively in the 1996 film Scream, with no further roles in the franchise. Himbry's interactions underscore the school's tense atmosphere following the initial killings. He briefly comforts Sidney Prescott, a student affected by the events, by holding her cheek while escorting her to speak with police, a gesture that highlights his concern but also adds to the film's undercurrent of unease around adult figures. With staff and students, he demonstrates a no-nonsense demeanor, announcing the suspension of classes and a curfew over the public address system to address the crisis. In a key confrontation, Himbry summons two male students to his office for wearing Ghostface masks as a prank, berating them for their insensitivity toward recent victims and suspending them on the spot, while threatening expulsion for any further inappropriate behavior. This incident, occurring in the shared school setting with Sidney, amplifies the disruption caused by the murders. Himbry's death marks a pivotal escalation in the killer's pattern, extending the violence beyond teenagers to target an adult authority. After dismissing the students, he remains alone in his office, where he is brutally attacked and gutted by Ghostface. His body is then strung up by its entrails and displayed from the football field goalpost, a gruesome spectacle discovered by partygoers later that night, prompting widespread panic. This shocking kill, filmed in a single take lasting two hours according to Winkler, emphasizes the randomness and brutality of the attacks.

Billy Loomis

Billy Loomis is a fictional character and the primary antagonist in the 1996 slasher film Scream, portrayed by actor Skeet Ulrich. As Sidney Prescott's boyfriend, Billy initially appears as a charming and supportive high school student, but he is revealed to be one of the two Ghostface killers responsible for a series of murders in Woodsboro. He partners briefly with his friend Stu Macher in the killings, serving as the calculated leader behind the spree. Billy's actions are driven by a deep-seated revenge motive stemming from his mother's abandonment of the family, which he attributes to an affair between his father, Hank Loomis, and Sidney's mother, Maureen Prescott. In the film's climax, he explicitly states, "Your slut mother was fucking my father, and she's the reason my mom moved out and abandoned me," framing the murders as retribution against Maureen's family while planning to frame Sidney's father, Neil Prescott. This personal vendetta aligns with the film's meta-commentary on horror tropes, positioning Billy as a horror movie enthusiast who emulates slasher villains. Throughout the film, Billy features in several pivotal scenes that highlight his duplicity, including stabbing Deputy Dewey Riley in the back during the house party chaos to eliminate a witness. He further deceives Sidney by faking his own death after being "attacked" by Ghostface, using fake blood to simulate a stabbing wound and gain her sympathy. The final confrontation unfolds in Sidney's living room, where Billy sheds his facade, admits his role in the killings, and attempts to murder her, only to be interrupted by reporter Gale Weathers, whom he shoots. Sidney ultimately kills Billy by shooting him in the head with a single bullet from Gale's gun, ending his rampage. In the franchise's sequels, Billy makes a brief cameo appearance as a fictionalized version of himself in the in-universe film Stab during Scream 2 (1997), portrayed by Luke Wilson in a scene parodying the original movie's events. He is frequently referenced in later entries, such as Scream 3 (2000) where his influence inspires subsequent killers, and established as the originator of the Ghostface killing pattern across the series. His full live-action appearance is limited to Scream (1996), with only allusions and archival footage in the sequels.

Cotton Weary

Cotton Weary is a fictional character in the Scream film series, portrayed by actor Liev Schreiber. Introduced as a college student in Woodsboro, Weary becomes central to the narrative through his wrongful accusation in the murder of Maureen Prescott, Sidney Prescott's mother. His brief appearance in the 1996 film Scream establishes him primarily through mentions and a voice cameo on television, where he is depicted as the convicted killer during Sidney's interview, highlighting the swift injustice of his framing based on circumstantial evidence tied to an affair with Maureen. The affair between Weary and Maureen Prescott, which occurred a year prior to the events of Scream, directly leads to his arrest and imprisonment after he is identified as the last person seen with her before her death. Despite his innocence, Weary serves time as the prime suspect, embodying the series' exploration of media sensationalism and miscarriages of justice that destroy innocent lives. This framing underscores themes of collateral damage in personal scandals, positioning Weary as a victim of Maureen's secretive lifestyle rather than a perpetrator. In Scream 2 (1997), Weary returns in a full role after his exoneration following the revelation of the true killers from the first film, now seeking public vindication and financial restitution through a high-profile interview with Sidney. His vengeful pursuit of Sidney stems from the resentment over her testimony that contributed to his conviction, though it evolves into a complex bid for redemption amid escalating threats. During the climax, Weary is held captive by Nancy Loomis (also known as Debbie Salt), who manipulates the situation to force a confrontation; in self-defense and to protect Sidney, Weary ultimately shoots and kills Loomis, surviving the ordeal and affirming his role as an unlikely ally against further injustice. This arc amplifies the franchise's commentary on revenge born from wrongful persecution, portraying Weary's transformation from accused villain to sympathetic survivor.

Dewey Riley

Dewey Riley is a fictional character in the Scream film series, portrayed by David Arquette throughout the franchise. Introduced as the younger brother of Tatum Riley and a bumbling deputy sheriff in Woodsboro, California, Dewey serves as comic relief while evolving into a heroic protector against the Ghostface killers. His arc highlights themes of perseverance and loyalty, as he aids Sidney Prescott and others in surviving multiple murder sprees despite repeated injuries and professional setbacks. In Scream (1996), Dewey appears as the 25-year-old deputy sheriff tasked with investigating the Woodsboro murders. He escorts Sidney Prescott to safety but is stabbed in the back by one of the Ghostfaces, Billy Loomis and Stu Macher, yet miraculously survives due to the injury missing vital organs. This near-death experience marks the beginning of his recurring role as an unlikely survivor, providing both humor through his earnest incompetence and support during the climax where he helps subdue the killers. Dewey returns in Scream 2 (1997) as a more cautious deputy, accompanying Sidney to college amid a new killing spree targeting the Stab film cast and crew. He is stabbed again—nine times in total across the series up to this point—while protecting Gale Weathers, but survives with medical intervention, reinforcing his resilient everyman persona. In Scream 3 (2000), he works as a security consultant on the Stab 3 set in Hollywood, proposing marriage to Gale at the film's end after they team up to stop Roman Bridger's rampage, symbolizing his growth from isolated deputy to committed partner. By Scream 4 (2011), Dewey has been promoted to sheriff of Woodsboro, reflecting his experience from prior events, though his marriage to Gale strains under her career demands and his small-town duties. He leads the investigation into a new Ghostface targeting Sidney's return but suffers further injuries, including a brutal garage door attack, before assisting in unmasking Jill Roberts and Charlie Walker. His tenure as sheriff underscores cycles of promotion and demotion, as later films depict him reverting to deputy status under new leadership like Judy Hicks. In Scream (2022), Dewey lives divorced from Gale in Woodsboro, demoted back to deputy and grappling with isolation after the events of prior sequels. He attempts to warn Sidney about the new killers but is fatally stabbed multiple times in the stomach and back by Amber Freeman at the hospital, with accomplice Richie Kirsch involved in the broader spree; his death is confirmed when he stops breathing, marking a tragic end to his arc. Despite this, Dewey's family life with Gale—spanning their marriage, shared investigations, and eventual separation—highlights his personal growth amid professional turbulence. Arquette reprises the role in Scream 7 (2026), with Dewey's return likely via flashback sequences exploring past events or a narrative device addressing his demise, joining surviving characters like Sidney and Gale. Dewey has appeared in all five prior Scream films from 1996 to 2022, establishing him as a core ensemble member whose blend of vulnerability and bravery endeared him to audiences. As Tatum's protective older brother, he briefly mourns her death in the original film, shaping his surrogate familial bond with Sidney.

Gale Weathers

Gale Weathers is a fictional character in the Scream film series, portrayed by Courteney Cox. Introduced as an ambitious television reporter for the news program Top Story, she initially arrives in Woodsboro to cover the murder of Maureen Prescott, exploiting the tragedy for her career by promoting a controversial book that accuses Cotton Weary of the crime. This self-serving approach positions her as an antagonist to Sidney Prescott, whom she hounds for interviews, highlighting her ruthless journalistic pursuits. Throughout the franchise, Weathers evolves from a fame-driven outsider into a resilient survivor and key ally, appearing in every installment from Scream (1996) to the upcoming Scream 7 (2026), making her the only main character to do so. In the original film, she redeems herself by assisting in the confrontation against killers Billy Loomis and Stu Macher, getting stabbed in the process but ultimately shooting Billy to help end the spree. Her arc deepens in Scream 2 (1997), where she promotes her book on the Woodsboro events and survives a gunshot wound while aiding in the defeat of new Ghostfaces at Windsor College. By Scream 3 (2000), she investigates copycat killings in Hollywood, showing growing compassion, and becomes engaged to Dewey Riley, with whom she later marries in Scream 4 (2011), collaborating on investigations into Woodsboro's renewed murders. Weathers' transformation continues in the requel era, as she transitions to a talk show host and author, authoring books on the killings while facing personal losses. In Scream (2022), she mourns Dewey's death—widowing her after their divorce—and helps defeat a new generation of killers, solidifying her role as a franchise mainstay. Scream VI (2023) sees her promoting another book in New York City, surviving multiple stabs from Ghostface and urging survivors to reach out to Sidney Prescott. Her journalistic drive persists, blending ambition with heroism, as evidenced by her brief but pivotal collaborations with Dewey across films. For Scream 7, set for release in 2026, Cox reprises the role, with Weathers serving as the narrative link reuniting core survivors more than two years after the prior events.

Ghostface

Ghostface is the iconic masked killer persona central to the Scream film series, depicted as a figure clad in a black hooded robe and a white, elongated mask with a screaming expression, inspired by Edvard Munch's painting The Scream. The mask, originally a mass-produced Halloween novelty item from Fun World, was discovered by producer Marianne Maddalena during location scouting for the first film and selected for its eerie, anonymous quality that evoked classic horror imagery. Ghostface's voice, provided by actor Roger L. Jackson across all installments, is electronically modulated to sound deep and sinister, delivering taunting phone calls that reference horror movie tropes and quiz victims on film trivia to heighten suspense before attacks. Introduced in Scream (1996), Ghostface was originated by Billy Loomis and Stu Macher, establishing a tradition of dual killers operating under the persona to execute their rampage in Woodsboro. This pattern of multiple perpetrators per film persisted throughout the franchise, as seen in Scream 2 (1997) with Mickey and Mrs. Loomis, allowing for coordinated attacks and misdirection while maintaining the singular, enigmatic threat of the masked figure. The killers employ standardized methods, including stealthy stabbings with a hunting knife and the signature voice-changer for psychological terror, often targeting Sidney Prescott and her circle in ritualistic pursuits. Over the series, Ghostface variations reflect evolving motivations, shifting from personal revenge rooted in betrayal to broader themes like seeking infamy through media or obsessive fandom of the Stab films that fictionalize the events. While the core archetype remains consistent— a faceless slasher blending humor, horror, and self-awareness—the operators adapt the persona to contemporary cultural anxieties, with multiple Ghostfaces collaborating or betraying each other to sustain the killings across sequels. Ghostface's cultural legacy has profoundly influenced pop culture, becoming one of the most recognizable horror icons since its debut, with the costume frequently parodied in films like Scary Movie (2000) and referenced in television shows, music videos, and Halloween trends worldwide. The character revitalized the slasher genre in the 1990s by subverting expectations, grossing over $910 million globally across the franchise to date, and symbolizing meta-commentary on horror conventions. Ghostface appears in every Scream installment, including the upcoming Scream 7 (2026), where new operators will don the mask to confront returning characters.

Hank Loomis

Hank Loomis is a minor supporting character in the 1996 slasher film Scream, portrayed by actor C.W. Morgan. He serves as the father of Billy Loomis, one of the film's primary antagonists, and is depicted as a lawyer whose marriage to Billy's mother ends in divorce due to his extramarital affair with Maureen Prescott, the mother of protagonist Sidney Prescott. This affair forms a central element of Billy's backstory and rage-driven motivations for the Woodsboro murders. Hank's screen time is limited to a few brief scenes early in the film. He first appears at the Woodsboro police station, where he arrives to retrieve Billy following his arrest on suspicion of involvement in the killings; during the interrogation by Sheriff Burke, Hank defends his son by asserting ownership of the cellular phone linked to the threatening calls and urging authorities to verify call records through his carrier, AirFone Comp. Later, outside the station, he shares a short exchange with Neil Prescott—Sidney's father—about the shared family turmoil resulting from the affair. After these encounters, Hank departs the police station with Billy and does not reappear amid the escalating murders, implying he flees the increasingly dangerous Woodsboro amid the chaos. He has no further on-screen appearances in the Scream film series beyond the 1996 original.

Kenny Jones

Kenny Jones is a minor character in the 1996 slasher film Scream, portrayed by actor W. Earl Brown. As the overweight and beleaguered cameraman for ambitious reporter Gale Weathers, Kenny accompanies her news crew to Woodsboro to cover the series of brutal murders targeting high school students. He endures Gale's frequent verbal abuse throughout the coverage, faithfully operating the camera during interviews and stakeouts related to the killings. During the climactic party at Stu Macher's house, Kenny remains in the news van monitoring a 30-second delayed live feed of the event. Spotting Ghostface poised to attack Randy Meeks on the screen, he rushes outside in a desperate attempt to intervene and warn the victim. However, Stu Macher, disguised as Ghostface, ambushes him from behind and slits his throat, killing him instantly. The killers then hoist Kenny's bloodied corpse onto the roof of the news van; moments later, as Gale speeds away in panic, the body slides down onto the windshield, causing her to crash. Kenny appears exclusively in Scream (1996) and does not return in subsequent films in the series. His abrupt, on-camera demise underscores the franchise's theme of media exploitation turning deadly, as his death occurs while he is still connected to the broadcast equipment.

Maureen Prescott

Maureen Prescott is a pivotal character in the Scream film series, serving as the mother of protagonist Sidney Prescott and the unwitting catalyst for many of the franchise's central conflicts. She is deceased prior to the events of the first film, having been murdered approximately one year before the Woodsboro killings in 1996, and appears only in photographs, flashbacks, and dream sequences throughout the series. Portrayed by actress Lynn McRee in her younger iterations—using early modeling photos for Scream (1996) and Scream 2 (1997), and appearing physically in flashback and hallucinatory scenes in Scream 3 (2000)—Maureen is depicted as a seemingly ordinary suburban wife and mother whose hidden past unravels to reveal layers of personal turmoil and betrayal. Maureen's backstory involves a double life marked by infidelity and unresolved trauma. In Woodsboro, she engaged in secret affairs with at least two men: Hank Loomis, the father of Sidney's boyfriend Billy Loomis, and Cotton Weary, a local figure whose involvement with her led to significant family disruptions and simmering resentments. These liaisons, exposed through covert recordings, contributed to marital breakdowns, including the dissolution of the Loomis family, and planted seeds of vengeance that echoed through subsequent events in the series. Further depth to Maureen's history is unveiled in Scream 3, where flashbacks portray her as an aspiring actress who left Woodsboro for Hollywood two decades earlier, adopting the stage name Rina Reynolds. There, she suffered a devastating assault at a party hosted by film producer John Milton, resulting in the birth of her son Roman Bridger, whom she gave up for adoption and never acknowledged. Upon returning home, she resumed her life with husband Neil Prescott and daughter Sidney, but the lingering effects of her experiences fueled motivations for key antagonists: Billy Loomis sought retribution over his father's affair, his mother Nancy (Mrs. Loomis) acted on grief from Billy's fate, and Roman pursued revenge for his abandonment. Though never appearing on-screen during the main timeline, Maureen's presence permeates the narrative, with her photographs and memories invoked repeatedly to underscore themes of legacy and inherited pain; her murder profoundly shapes Sidney's survivor's guilt and resilience.

Neil Prescott

Neil Prescott is a recurring character in the Scream film series, portrayed by actor Lawrence Hecht. He serves as the father of the central protagonist, Sidney Prescott, and appears primarily in Scream (1996) with a brief role in Scream 3 (2000). In Scream, Neil is depicted as a caring but largely absent parent, away on a business trip in Atlanta at the outset of the Woodsboro murders. Unbeknownst to Sidney and authorities, he is kidnapped early by the killers, Billy Loomis and Stu Macher, who use his stolen cell phone to make harassing calls, briefly shifting suspicion toward him when the traces lead to his device. He remains tied up and hidden throughout much of the film, discovered bound in the Loomis basement during the climax, and is rescued unharmed after the killers' defeat. Neil's role underscores his supportive dynamic with Sidney, offering paternal reassurance amid her trauma from her mother's prior murder, though his limited screen time emphasizes his peripheral involvement in the escalating horror. He survives the events without injury, providing a stable family anchor for Sidney post-crisis. In Scream 3, Neil reappears in a minor capacity, comforting Sidney over the phone and in person early on after news of renewed killings tied to the Stab film franchise. He is later abducted by the killer, Roman Bridger, as bait to lure Sidney, but is ultimately freed alive at the story's resolution. His appearances highlight ongoing familial concern without deeper plot agency.

Randy Meeks

Randy Meeks is a fictional character in the Scream film series, portrayed by actor Jamie Kennedy. Introduced in Scream (1996) as a high school student at Woodsboro High and a clerk at the local video store, Randy is depicted as an excitable horror movie geek with deep knowledge of slasher tropes. He functions as the group's informal expert on genre conventions, delivering key monologues that outline survival "rules" for horror films, such as avoiding sex, splitting up, or uttering phrases like "I'll be right back," which he explains during a classroom scene to educate his peers, including Sidney Prescott. In Scream 2 (1997), Randy appears as a film class student at Windsor College, continuing his role as the meta-commentator by updating the rules for sequels—emphasizing higher body counts, more elaborate death scenes, and the danger of the killer returning for revenge—while riding in a van with survivors Sidney, Dewey Riley, and Gale Weathers. His guidance briefly positions him as a mentor to the group, using his expertise to warn them of escalating threats from Ghostface. However, mid-film, Randy is brutally murdered by Nancy Loomis (also known as Mrs. Loomis and portrayed by Laurie Metcalf), the vengeful mother of the original killer Billy Loomis; she ambushes him inside the news van, stabbing him multiple times in the gut and chest while he frantically explains the killer's patterns over the phone, underscoring the irony of his genre awareness failing to save him. Randy's death, a controversial choice by screenwriter Kevin Williamson to raise the stakes by eliminating a fan-favorite early, has been lamented by the creator, who noted it was intended to prove "no one is safe" but later expressed regret over cutting short the character's potential in a long-running franchise. His legacy endures through family members who carry forward his horror-savvy persona: sister Martha Meeks, who makes a brief appearance in Scream 3 (2000), and niece Mindy Meeks-Martin along with nephew Chad Meeks-Martin, who feature in later installments and echo his role as rules-explaining experts. Kennedy provides a voice cameo as Randy in Scream (2022), heard during a party scene, further cementing the character's enduring influence.

Sidney Prescott

Sidney Prescott is the central protagonist and iconic "final girl" of the Scream film series, portrayed by Canadian actress Neve Campbell throughout all installments. Introduced as a high school student in Woodsboro, California, in Scream (1996), she is the daughter of Neil Prescott and the late Maureen Prescott, whose murder a year earlier leaves Sidney deeply traumatized and shapes her emotional arc across the franchise. As the recurring target of the masked killer known as Ghostface, Sidney evolves from a grieving teenager into a resourceful survivor who confronts successive waves of attacks in each film, demonstrating resilience amid escalating personal and physical threats. Sidney's journey is marked by profound psychological growth, beginning with her initial vulnerability in Scream (1996) and Scream 2 (1997), where she navigates college life while evading killers. In Scream 3 (2000), she uncovers devastating family revelations about her mother's hidden Hollywood past and her own half-brother, intensifying her sense of betrayal and isolation as she lives in seclusion. By Scream 4 (2011), she has become a more empowered figure returning to her hometown, and in the 2022 requel Scream, she reemerges after years away to protect a new generation connected to her past, emphasizing her role as a guardian of the franchise's legacy. Although absent from Scream VI (2023), her well-being and family life are affirmed, underscoring her enduring survival. In the forthcoming Scream 7 (2026), Sidney leads the narrative once more, now as a mother defending her daughter Tatum from renewed dangers. She survives every encounter with Ghostface, cementing her status as the series' unbreakable anchor. Her key romantic relationships highlight Sidney's path to healing and stability: she begins with high school boyfriend Billy Loomis in Scream (1996), forms a bond with pre-med student Derek Feldman during Scream 2 (1997), and develops a committed partnership with detective Mark Kincaid in Scream 3 (2000), whom she later marries and with whom she has children, including daughter Tatum in Scream 7. Sidney also maintains vital alliances with journalist Gale Weathers and deputy Dewey Riley, relying on their support through the crises. Sidney Prescott appears in every film in the series except Scream VI: Scream (1996), Scream 2 (1997), Scream 3 (2000), Scream 4 (2011), Scream (2022), and Scream 7 (2026).

Steve Orth

Steve Orth is a minor character in the 1996 slasher film Scream, directed by Wes Craven and written by Kevin Williamson. He is portrayed by actor Kevin Patrick Walls, who appears only in the film's opening sequence. Orth has no spoken dialogue and no established backstory, serving primarily to heighten the tension as the boyfriend of Casey Becker. In the iconic pre-credits scene, Orth is abducted prior to the events unfolding at Casey's home and tied to a wooden chair on her backyard patio, gagged with duct tape over his mouth and showing signs of prior injury with blood on his abdomen. During a harassing phone call from the masked killer Ghostface, who quizzes Casey on horror movie trivia, Orth's restrained presence is revealed through the patio doors to terrorize her. When Casey incorrectly identifies the killer in Friday the 13th as Jason Voorhees rather than his mother Pamela, Ghostface approaches Orth in the shadows and disembowels him with a large hunting knife, slitting his gut open in a visceral display of gore that marks the first on-screen death in the franchise. This killing establishes the film's brutal tone and the killers' modus operandi early on, contributing to the body count in the Woodsboro murders. It is later disclosed that Orth was murdered by Stu Macher, one of the two perpetrators behind the Ghostface persona, as confirmed by the filmmakers.

Stu Macher

Stu Macher is a fictional character and one of the two main antagonists in the 1996 slasher film Scream, portrayed by actor Matthew Lillard. As Billy Loomis's best friend and accomplice, Stu embodies a chaotic and impulsive follower in their joint role as the Ghostface killers, assisting in a series of murders targeting high school students in Woodsboro. Known for his hyperactive, eccentric demeanor and lack of empathy, Stu hosts a large house party intended to celebrate the end of school, which inadvertently draws victims into the killers' trap and escalates the body count. Stu's motivations stem from thrill-seeking and susceptibility to peer pressure, as revealed in the film's climax when he dismisses his involvement with the quip, "Peer pressure. I'm far too sensitive," underscoring his role as an enabler driven more by excitement and loyalty to Billy than by personal vendetta. This dynamic portrays him as a psychopathic sidekick whose impulsive violence contrasts with more calculated approaches in the franchise. In the final confrontation at his home, Stu attacks Sidney Prescott after sustaining stab wounds from Billy's betrayal; Sidney retaliates by dropping a large television on his head, electrocuting him to death amid sparks and chaos. Lillard's energetic and memorable performance as Stu has left a lasting cultural impact, inspiring widespread fan appreciation and persistent campaigns for the character's revival despite his on-screen demise. This enthusiasm, fueled by Stu's quotable lines and manic energy, contributed to confirmed rumors of Lillard's return, with the actor reprising the role in a cameo appearance in Scream 7 (2026). Stu's primary appearance is in Scream (1996), though he receives later references in the series through callbacks to his house and the original killings.

Tatum Riley

Tatum Riley is a fictional character in the Scream film series, portrayed by Rose McGowan in the 1996 original film. She serves as Sidney Prescott's witty and loyal best friend, offering sarcastic commentary and emotional support amid the Woodsboro murders, while also being the younger sister of Deputy Dewey Riley. Her character subverts the slasher genre's "blonde bimbo" best friend trope by being intelligent and quick-witted rather than stereotypical, yet she meets an early demise that underscores the franchise's unpredictability. During a confrontation at Stu Macher's house party, Tatum encounters Ghostface in the garage, where she is stabbed and then trapped while attempting to escape through a pet door. Ghostface activates the automatic garage door, crushing her to death in a gruesome accident that highlights the film's blend of horror and dark humor. This sequence not only eliminates a seemingly protected side character early but also parodies common escape attempts in horror films, reinforcing Scream's meta-commentary on genre conventions. Tatum does not appear in subsequent Scream films following her death in the first installment. However, she is referenced through her brother Dewey, whose grief over her loss influences his arc, including a brief acknowledgment of her ashes in Scream (2022). Additionally, Sidney honors her memory by naming her daughter Tatum, as revealed in the Scream 7 trailer.

Introduced in Scream 2 (1997)

Cici Cooper

Cici Cooper is a fictional character in the 1997 slasher film Scream 2, the second installment in the Scream franchise. She is portrayed by actress Sarah Michelle Gellar, who was cast in a supporting role shortly after her breakout performances in films like I Know What You Did Last Summer. Cici appears exclusively in Scream 2 and does not return in subsequent entries in the series. As a student at Windsor College, Cici is depicted as a member of the Omega Beta Zeta sorority, taking on the responsibility of the "sober sister" during a house party attended by her fellow members. This role leaves her isolated in the sorority house while others are out, setting the stage for her encounter with the killer. Her character adds to the film's exploration of college life and vulnerability, emphasizing the dangers of being alone amid escalating threats on campus. Cici's storyline culminates in a tense confrontation with Ghostface, the masked killer, who initiates contact via a taunting phone call referencing horror movie tropes. Mistaking the call initially for her boyfriend, she soon realizes the peril and attempts to flee through the sorority house, leading to a high-stakes chase. Ghostface ultimately stabs her multiple times before throwing her off a second-story balcony, resulting in her death and marking her as the fourth victim in the film's murder spree. This sequence parallels the franchise's opening kill of Casey Becker from the 1996 original Scream, with Cici's full name—Casey "Cici" Cooper—directly evoking Casey's and incorporating similar elements of isolation, phone harassment, and a dramatic fall. The scene updates the iconic trope for the sequel's college setting, heightening tension through physical pursuit and balcony peril.

Derek Feldman

Derek Feldman is a fictional character in the Scream film series, appearing exclusively in Scream 2 (1997). He is portrayed by actor Jerry O'Connell and serves as Sidney Prescott's boyfriend while both attend Windsor College. As a pre-med student and member of the Delta Lambda fraternity, Derek represents a seemingly stable and loyal romantic interest for Sidney, contrasting her traumatic experiences from the Woodsboro murders. Throughout Scream 2, Derek demonstrates his support for Sidney amid the escalating copycat killings on campus, often comforting her emotionally and physically during moments of vulnerability. Their relationship includes romantic gestures, such as Derek serenading Sidney publicly to express his affection, highlighting his earnest devotion despite the surrounding suspicion and danger. He actively tries to protect her, including intervening during an attack at a party where he sustains an arm injury. In the film's climactic theater sequence, Derek is bound and accused of involvement in the murders, fueling Sidney's doubts about his innocence. However, he is ultimately shot and killed by the true killer, Mickey Altieri, which exonerates him and underscores his genuine loyalty to Sidney. Derek does not appear in any subsequent Scream films.

Hallie McDaniel

Hallie McDaniel is a supporting character in the 1997 slasher film Scream 2, the second installment in the Scream series. Portrayed by actress Elise Neal, she serves as Sidney Prescott's dorm roommate and close friend at Windsor College, providing emotional support amid the new wave of killings targeting Sidney. As the attacks intensify following the murder of sorority sister Cici Cooper, Hallie sticks by Sidney's side, joining her in seeking safety with law enforcement during a frantic escape attempt. This friendship underscores Hallie's role as a loyal confidante, echoing yet updating the sidekick archetype from the original film with her presence as a Black female character in the sequel's college setting. Hallie's life ends abruptly when she is stabbed multiple times in the back of a police car by Mrs. Loomis after a high-speed crash orchestrated by the killer. The attack occurs as Hallie attempts to flee over the vehicle's exterior, collapsing dead in front of the horrified Sidney. Hallie appears exclusively in Scream 2, with no further roles in the franchise.

Joel Martin

Joel Martin is a supporting character in the slasher film Scream 2 (1997), the second entry in the Scream franchise. Portrayed by actor Duane Martin, he serves as journalist Gale Weathers' new cameraman, having replaced Kenny Jones after the events of the first film. During the Windsor College murders, Joel grows wary of the escalating danger, having read Gale's book on the Woodsboro killings and learned of her previous cameraman's fate. He joins Gale, Deputy Dewey Riley, and film geek Randy Meeks in the news van, where Randy delivers his "rules" for surviving a horror sequel, including avoiding isolation and heeding ominous signs—advice that underscores the peril for peripheral characters like cameramen. Influenced by this cautionary discussion and the mounting body count, Joel remains on edge throughout the investigation. Joel's role culminates in the discovery of Randy's stabbed body inside the news van, prompting him to immediately quit and flee the campus by taxi for his own safety. He briefly reappears at the film's conclusion to film the survivors outside the hospital, emerging as one of the few unscathed characters in the series. Joel appears exclusively in Scream 2.

Maureen Evans and Phil Stevens

Maureen Evans and Phil Stevens are fictional characters in the 1997 slasher film Scream 2, serving as the opening victims in a sequence that homages the original film's structure while introducing the sequel's copycat killings. Portrayed by Jada Pinkett Smith as Maureen and Omar Epps as Phil, they are depicted as Windsor College seniors attending a sneak preview screening of Stab, an in-universe film loosely based on the Woodsboro murders from the first Scream. In the theater, Phil leaves his seat to use the bathroom, where he hears noises and presses his ear against a stall door; Ghostface then stabs him fatally through the ear from the adjacent stall. Ghostface subsequently wears Phil's jacket to impersonate him, returning to sit beside Maureen during the screening of a Stab scene that recreates the original film's opening attack on Casey Becker. Growing suspicious of the impostor, Maureen flees the theater and barricades herself in her dorm room bathroom, but Ghostface breaks in, taunts her briefly, and stabs her multiple times, leading to her death. Their murders establish Scream 2's meta-layer by blending real violence with the characters' viewing of a fictionalized version of prior events, underscoring themes of sequels and media sensationalism in the franchise. Evans and Stevens appear exclusively in Scream 2 and have no prior or subsequent roles in the series.

Mickey Altieri

Mickey Altieri is a fictional character and the secondary antagonist in the 1997 slasher film Scream 2, the second installment in the Scream franchise. Portrayed by actor Timothy Olyphant in his feature film debut, Altieri is depicted as a charismatic film studies major at Windsor College, where he befriends survivor Sidney Prescott and fellow movie enthusiast Randy Meeks. His outward persona as an affable, media-savvy student masks his role as one of the film's two Ghostface killers, whom he embodies with a blend of unhinged enthusiasm and calculated theatrics. Altieri's killings form part of a copycat spree inspired by the Woodsboro murders and the in-universe film Stab, targeting Sidney and her circle to escalate the terror beyond the original events. He partners with Nancy Loomis to execute the murders, providing an inside perspective on Sidney's life at college. Driven by an ideological obsession with fame, Altieri aims to provoke widespread media coverage of his crimes, intending to surrender after the rampage and secure notoriety through a high-profile trial and successful insanity defense—positioning himself as a symbol of cinematic violence's corrupting influence. In the film's climactic confrontation, Altieri unmasks himself, shoots and fatally wounds Sidney's boyfriend Derek Feldman, and confesses his role in the murders, including the fatal shooting of Randy Meeks. He is ultimately shot multiple times by Sidney Prescott and Gale Weathers, ending his spree and thwarting his bid for infamy. Altieri does not appear in subsequent Scream films.

Nancy Loomis

Nancy Loomis, also known by her alias Debbie Salt, is a fictional character and the primary antagonist in the 1997 horror film Scream 2, portrayed by actress Laurie Metcalf. Metcalf, who received acclaim for her versatile performances, approached the dual role by mentally separating the innocuous reporter persona from the vengeful mother, allowing her to fully embrace the character's unhinged intensity during the reveal scene, which she has described as the most surprising twist in the franchise. As the mother of Billy Loomis, Nancy's actions are driven by profound grief and a desire for revenge against Sidney Prescott, whom she blames for her son's death in the Woodsboro murders. Her motive stems from the emotional devastation of losing Billy, compounded by the public vilification of his legacy, leading her to orchestrate a new wave of Ghostface killings at Windsor College as an act of "good old-fashioned revenge." In a climactic monologue, she declares to Sidney, "My motive isn't as '90s as Mickey's. Mine is just good old-fashioned revenge. You killed my son! And now I kill you, and I can't think of anything more rational," underscoring her distorted sense of maternal justice. Throughout Scream 2, Nancy disguises herself as the pushy local reporter Debbie Salt, using the persona to infiltrate the investigation and gather information on the survivors. She manipulates events from the shadows, enlisting an accomplice to execute the murders while positioning herself to frame others and escape scrutiny. Key among her actions is the stabbing death of Randy Meeks inside a news van, motivated by his on-air criticism of Billy's name. In the film's finale, her identity is exposed during a confrontation at a theater; after betraying her partner by shooting him to ensure her plan's success, she is shot in the neck by Cotton Weary and then shot in the head by Sidney Prescott to ensure her death. Nancy appears exclusively in Scream 2 and does not return in subsequent installments.

Randy Meeks (continued role)

In Scream 2 (1997), Randy Meeks continues to be portrayed by Jamie Kennedy as the horror-savvy survivor from Woodsboro High, now a student at Windsor College studying film alongside Sidney Prescott. Relocating to the Ohio campus, Randy integrates into Sidney's circle, working part-time as a freelance cameraman for Gale Weathers while maintaining his encyclopedic knowledge of slasher tropes. His presence provides comic relief and meta-commentary, evolving from his initial role in the 1996 film where he first outlined basic survival guidelines for horror protagonists. At Windsor College, Randy expands on horror conventions by delivering a speech adapting the rules specifically for sequels, cautioning that body counts escalate, death scenes become more elaborate with increased gore, and the killer exhibits superhuman resilience, often returning for surprise attacks. This update underscores the film's self-aware critique of franchise formulas, positioning Randy as the voice of genre expertise amid escalating murders. Additionally, Randy subverts the "no sex" rule he previously espoused by engaging in a sexual encounter with Hallie McDaniel, Sidney's outspoken roommate, highlighting how sequel dynamics upend prior survival logic. Randy's arc culminates in a brutal death during the third act, where he is gutted by Mrs. Loomis (disguised as reporter Debbie Salt) inside a news van on campus grounds. Moments before, while fleeing the killer and barricading himself in the vehicle, Randy phones Sidney to warn her of the attacker's superhuman traits and the likelihood of a trilogy setup, predicting that the killer will frame someone close while revealing accomplices in a shocking twist. Stabbed repeatedly from behind after failing to notice Mrs. Loomis already inside, his demise shocks the survivors and audience, emphasizing the sequels' higher stakes and the expert's vulnerability.

Sidney Prescott (continued role)

In Scream 2 (1997), Sidney Prescott, portrayed by Neve Campbell, transitions into a college freshman at Windsor College, where she attempts to rebuild her life following the Woodsboro murders. As a student, she faces renewed notoriety from her past, compounded by the release of the fictional film Stab, which dramatizes the original killings and draws unwanted attention to her survival. This period marks the beginning of her healing process, as she cautiously enters a relationship with fellow student Derek Feldman, who pledges his loyalty through a symbolic gesture during a fraternity event. The threats escalate dramatically when a copycat Ghostface killer begins targeting individuals connected to Sidney, culminating in a brutal attack on her in the sorority house. During this assault, Ghostface stabs Sidney in the arm, forcing her to barricade herself and fight for survival by using a desk lamp as a weapon to fend off her attacker. This incident heightens her vulnerability, pushing her to rely on the survival rules outlined by Randy Meeks, such as never saying "I'll be right back" and avoiding isolation, which she adheres to amid the chaos on campus. In the film's climactic theater finale, set during a screening of Stab, Sidney confronts the killers—Mickey Altieri, her film class peer, and Nancy Loomis, the vengeful mother of Billy Loomis from the first film. Drawing on her growing resilience, Sidney outmaneuvers them in the darkened auditorium, shooting Mickey multiple times after he reveals his motive of seeking fame through a sensational trial. Cotton Weary then shoots Mrs. Loomis in the neck, and Sidney shoots her in the head to ensure her death when she attempts to continue the attack. These actions solidify Sidney's evolution from a traumatized victim to a proactive survivor, though the ordeal underscores her ongoing struggle with trust and recovery.

Gale Weathers (continued role)

In Scream 2 (1997), Courteney Cox reprises her role as Gale Weathers, the ambitious journalist who arrives at Windsor College to cover the copycat killings inspired by the Woodsboro murders. Having capitalized on the original events by authoring the bestselling book The Woodsboro Murders—which is subsequently adapted into the in-universe film Stab—Gale initially faces renewed antagonism from Sidney Prescott for exploiting the tragedy for personal gain. However, her relentless pursuit of the story begins to shift her dynamic, as she apologizes to Sidney for past insensitivities and prioritizes investigative leads over sensationalism, marking the start of her transition from opportunistic reporter to a more empathetic ally. Gale's collaboration with Dewey Riley intensifies during the investigation, with Dewey assigning himself as her protector amid escalating threats, fostering a closer partnership that underscores her vulnerability and reliance on the group for survival. She actively aids the effort by analyzing patterns in the attacks and confronting potential suspects, such as arranging a risky interview with Cotton Weary to uncover connections to Sidney's past—though this backfires and heightens the danger. In a pivotal moment, Gale receives a taunting phone call from Ghostface, heightening her awareness of the killers' fixation on media exploitation, which mirrors her own career choices and prompts further self-reflection. During the climactic confrontation in an abandoned theater, Gale demonstrates resourcefulness and combat involvement, grabbing a discarded handgun to join Sidney in firing multiple shots at Mickey Altieri. Gale is shot in the shoulder by Mrs. Loomis during the chaos, endures the injury, and survives, collapsing but ultimately recovering as the immediate threat ends. This sequence solidifies her redemption arc, transforming her from a perceived exploiter—whose book inadvertently fueled the copycat spree—into a battle-tested survivor who contributes directly to the group's victory, while laying the groundwork for her evolving career as an author chronicling these events.

Dewey Riley (continued role)

In Scream 2 (1997), Dewey Riley, continued to be portrayed by David Arquette, transitions into a more proactive and competent deputy sheriff compared to his earlier portrayal. Having survived the Woodsboro murders, he flies from California to Windsor College in Ohio to protect Sidney Prescott, his surrogate sister and the primary target of the copycat killings, while assisting campus police in the investigation. This role marks his evolution from a somewhat bumbling officer to one who takes initiative in coordinating security and pursuing leads amid the escalating violence. Dewey's interactions with Gale Weathers deepen during the film, evolving from professional collaboration to subtle flirtation as they reunite to cover and combat the murders; he defends her against suspicions from others, highlighting their growing mutual reliance. He provides comic relief through awkward yet endearing moments, such as his exaggerated limp from prior injuries—resulting from a severed nerve—and humorous exchanges during tense pursuits, like navigating chaotic campus chases. As the brother of Tatum Riley, who perished in the original killings, Dewey's protective instincts are amplified, driving his determination to prevent further losses. During a confrontation in the campus radio station, Dewey is ambushed and stabbed multiple times in the back by Ghostface but manages to survive, underscoring his resilience and continued involvement in the survivors' circle. His actions emphasize a balance of earnest duty and levity, contributing to the film's meta-horror tone while advancing the plot through his investigative support.

Film Class Heroes (minor roles)

The minor Windsor College students in the film theory class scene of Scream 2 (1997) serve as a chorus of background participants, underscoring the film's meta-commentary on horror sequels and audience complicity in violence. These unnamed extras, collectively referred to as "film class students" in production credits, appear briefly during a lecture hall debate led by Randy Meeks, where they chime in with opinions on whether sequels inherently "suck" or can innovate within the genre. Their dialogue includes casual assertions tying cinematic tropes to real-world events, such as one student claiming that blame for tragedies like the Woodsboro murders should fall on audience demand for sensational content rather than the films themselves, echoing the in-universe Stab movie's influence. Portrayed by a mix of uncredited and credited actors, key examples include Joshua Jackson as the "Snotty Guy" (also listed as Film Class Guy #1), who provocatively defends sequels like Aliens (1986) as superior to their originals while critiquing the horror genre's reliance on escalating villainy; Walter Franks as Film Class Guy #2, who offers a neutral remark on the subjectivity of sequel quality; and Nina Petronzio as the Film Class Mopey Girl, who provides subdued reactions amid the discussion. Other students contribute background chatter, reacting to references to films like The Godfather Part II (1974) and debating directors such as Ridley Scott versus James Cameron, which highlights the class's academic focus on horror evolution. This ensemble dynamic amplifies Randy's expertise on survival rules, as their inputs prompt his corrective outbursts about formulaic tropes in slashers. Exclusively featured in Scream 2, these minor characters reinforce the narrative's themes of cinematic self-awareness without individual arcs, blending into the campus atmosphere where off-screen implications suggest some fall victim to Ghostface's rampage during the college-wide killings. Their collective presence establishes Windsor College as a hub of film-savvy youth vulnerable to the very tropes they analyze, heightening the sequel's irony.

Introduced in Scream 3 (2000)

Angelina Tyler

Angelina Tyler is a fictional supporting character in the Scream film series, introduced in Scream 3 (2000). She is portrayed by English actress Emily Mortimer. In the film, Tyler is cast as Sidney Prescott in Stab 3: Return to Woodsboro, the third installment in the meta-fictional horror franchise based on the Woodsboro murders. Selected through a nationwide radio contest among 50,000 entrants, she embodies a naïve newcomer to Hollywood with short dark hair, closely resembling the real Sidney Prescott. Tyler demonstrates an intense dedication to the role, employing method acting by dressing as Sidney, collecting souvenirs from the set, and even answering her phone in character during a threatening Ghostface call. Her immersion in the Sidney persona raises suspicions among the cast and investigators that she may be involved in the killings targeting the Stab 3 production, as her behavior mirrors the survivor's profile too closely. However, Tyler is ultimately revealed as an innocent victim when Ghostface—director Roman Bridger—stabs her to death in Jennifer Jolie's Hollywood Hills guest house, leaving her body in a pool of blood on the stairs. Tyler's sole appearance is in Scream 3, where she becomes the sixth victim of the film's Ghostface killing spree.

Christine Hamilton

Christine Hamilton is a minor character in the 2000 slasher film Scream 3, portrayed by American actress Kelly Rutherford. She serves as the girlfriend of exonerated convict Cotton Weary and becomes the first victim of the new Ghostface killing spree targeting those connected to the Stab film franchise. In the film's opening sequence, Hamilton is home alone, having just stepped out of the shower, when she receives a taunting phone call from Ghostface, who impersonates her boyfriend to gain entry. Disguised in the iconic Ghostface mask and robe, the killer attacks her in their Los Angeles apartment, leading to a brief chase where Hamilton fights back by kicking the assailant and attempting to use a golf club for defense. Ultimately, she is overpowered and stabbed multiple times, collapsing in front of Cotton Weary upon his arrival, which sets the stage for the murders linked to the production of Stab 3 at Sunrise Studios. Hamilton appears exclusively in Scream 3 and has no further role in the franchise. Her death highlights the killers' strategy of using personal relationships to draw out targets, indirectly tying into the broader conspiracy involving studio head John Milton.

Jennifer Jolie

Jennifer Jolie is a fictional character in the 2000 slasher film Scream 3, portrayed by actress Parker Posey. She is an established Hollywood actress cast to play the role of Gale Weathers in the in-universe film Stab 3, a meta-fictional sequel based on the Woodsboro murders. Jolie's performance draws direct parallels to the real Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox), as she adopts a similar assertive, journalistic demeanor while interacting with the actual Gale, often competing to prove herself the superior version of the character. Jolie's personality is marked by arrogance and overconfidence, embodying the ego-driven stereotypes of method actors in Hollywood. She boasts about her safety amid the killings targeting the Stab 3 cast, reasoning that by shadowing the real Gale, she becomes an unappealing target for Ghostface, declaring, "Everywhere you go, I’m gonna follow you, so if he wants to kill you, you’ll be there to be killed, and he won’t need to kill me." This hubris adds a layer of satire to the film's commentary on celebrity and fame, highlighting how actors immerse themselves in roles to the point of delusion, a recurring meta-theme in the Scream series. In the film, Jolie meets her demise during a confrontation at her mansion's pool area, where she is stabbed multiple times and electrocuted in a hot tub by the killer, revealed as Roman Bridger. The scene unfolds in front of a two-way mirror, amplifying the horror with Jolie's final quip denying her vulnerability as the Stab 3 killer's portrayer. Exclusive to Scream 3, her arc underscores the franchise's blend of humor and terror through self-referential Hollywood tropes.

John Milton

John Milton is a fictional character and the secondary antagonist in the 2000 slasher film Scream 3, the third installment in the Scream franchise. Portrayed by American actor Lance Henriksen, Milton is depicted as the ruthless head of the fictional Sunrise Studios in Hollywood and the executive producer behind the in-universe Stab film series, which dramatizes the events of the earlier Woodsboro murders. His character embodies the seedy underbelly of the film industry, leveraging his position to exploit aspiring actors. Milton's backstory reveals a direct and abusive connection to Maureen Prescott, the mother of protagonist Sidney Prescott and a former actress under his employ at Sunrise Studios. In the 1970s, he raped Maureen (then known by her stage name Rina Reynolds) at one of his lavish Hollywood parties intended for networking and career advancement opportunities. This assault resulted in the conception of Roman Bridger, the film's director of Stab 3 and primary antagonist, making Milton his biological father—though he remains unaware of this fact until the story's revelations. Throughout Scream 3, Milton oversees the production of Stab 3 amid a new wave of Ghostface murders targeting the cast and crew, hosting a high-profile wrap party at his mansion where multiple killings take place, escalating the terror in Hollywood. In the film's climax, he confronts the killer in his private screening room, pleading for his life by offering executive privileges, but is ultimately stabbed in the throat by Roman Bridger, marking his death as the final victim of the Hollywood murder spree. Milton appears exclusively in Scream 3 and does not return in subsequent franchise entries.

Mark Kincaid

Mark Kincaid is a fictional character in the Scream film series, introduced in Scream 3 (2000) as a Los Angeles homicide detective investigating a series of murders tied to the production of the fictional film Stab 3. Portrayed by actor Patrick Dempsey, Kincaid is initially presented as a potential suspect due to his involvement in the case following the death of Sidney Prescott's friend Cotton Weary, but he is quickly cleared and becomes an ally to the protagonists. He collaborates with journalist Gale Weathers, whom he assigns to assist in the probe, and provides protection to Sidney Prescott amid escalating threats from Ghostface. Throughout Scream 3, Kincaid demonstrates resourcefulness and calm under pressure, surviving multiple attacks and offering key support during the climactic confrontation at the fictional John Milton Studios. In the film's finale, he aids Dewey Riley and Gale Weathers in rushing to Sidney's aid after she defeats the killer, Roman Bridger, and later visits her secluded home alongside them, establishing a foundation for a romantic connection. Kincaid's character arc emphasizes his role as a sophisticated law enforcement figure contrasting the series' earlier small-town deputies, blending investigative expertise with personal concern for Sidney's safety. Kincaid does not appear in Scream 4 (2011), with no direct reference to him in that installment. However, he is implied to have become Sidney's long-term romantic partner, as later films reference her husband simply as "Mark," aligning with Kincaid's first name and their established rapport from Scream 3. This connection is briefly acknowledged in Scream (2022) and Scream VI (2023) through mentions of Sidney's marital status. In 2024, Dempsey expressed interest in reprising the role for Scream 7 (2026), stating there were ongoing discussions, but he ultimately did not return, with the film introducing a new character named Mark Evans in that capacity instead.

Martha Meeks

Martha Meeks is a minor character appearing exclusively in Scream 3 (2000), portrayed by actress Heather Matarazzo. She serves as the younger sister of Randy Meeks, the horror film enthusiast killed in the previous installment, Scream 2 (1997). Martha travels to the Los Angeles set of the in-universe film Stab 3 to visit Sidney Prescott, Dewey Riley, and Gale Weathers, delivering a VHS tape recorded by Randy shortly before his death. In the video, titled "Randy Meeks: Final Cut," Randy imparts "trilogy rules" for surviving the latest string of Ghostface murders, stressing that the killer is likely a family member driven by revenge and advising the group to stick together while suspecting no one completely. Martha, who shares her brother's affinity for horror movie conventions, expresses concern for their safety during the brief encounter, briefly filling the void left by Randy's absence with her enthusiastic demeanor. Following the delivery, Martha departs the studio with her unnamed boyfriend but is soon targeted by Ghostface. The killer pursues their vehicle on a rural road, forcing it off the path in a high-speed attack that results in a fatal crash, killing both Martha and her boyfriend off-screen. This roadside death underscores the escalating threat extending beyond the film production, claiming another link to the original Woodsboro survivors.

Roman Bridger

Roman Bridger is the primary antagonist and Ghostface killer in Scream 3 (2000), the third film in the Scream series. Portrayed by Scott Foley, he is depicted as a successful music video and film director hired to helm Stab 3: Return to Woodsboro, a meta-film within the franchise based on the earlier Woodsboro murders. Bridger maintains a charming, professional facade throughout much of the story, collaborating with the cast and crew while secretly orchestrating the killings that target the Stab 3 production. As the illegitimate son of Maureen Prescott—Sidney Prescott's mother—Bridger was conceived during Maureen's brief acting career in Hollywood in the early 1970s and rejected when he later sought her out as an adult. His parentage traces to producer John Milton, who hosted the party at which Maureen was raped, leading to her pregnancy with Roman. Motivated by deep-seated resentment over this familial abandonment, Bridger directs the Hollywood murders like scenes from one of his films, manipulating events to draw Sidney into the fray and expose long-buried secrets. During the climax at Milton's mansion, he reveals his identity to Sidney, stabs Deputy Dewey Riley multiple times in a brutal confrontation, and attempts to kill her before being shot in the head by the wounded Dewey, ending his rampage. Bridger's backstory and actions introduce the theme of family betrayal to the Scream series, shifting the killers' motivations from mere fandom or revenge against outsiders to intimate, personal grievances within Sidney's lineage. He appears exclusively in Scream 3, with no further roles in subsequent films until Foley confirmed his return as Roman Bridger in a small role for Scream 7 (2026).

Sarah Darling

Sarah Darling is a supporting character in the 2000 slasher film Scream 3, the third installment in the Scream franchise directed by Wes Craven. Portrayed by Jenny McCarthy, she is depicted as a rising actress cast in the fictional meta-film Stab 3: Return to Woodsboro, where she plays the role of Candy Brooks, a character inspired by early victims in the series' lore. McCarthy's performance highlights Darling's frustration with the chaotic Hollywood production environment, particularly the constant script rewrites that disrupt rehearsals. In her pivotal scene, Darling is alone at her home when she receives a threatening phone call from Ghostface, the masked killer, who uses a voice modulator to impersonate director Roman Bridger. Initially mistaking the call for a routine script reading for a new horror movie, she recites lines about her impending demise, only to realize the danger as the threats turn personal and violent. Paranoia mounts as she barricades herself in her bathroom, but Ghostface breaks through, punching her through a glass door before stabbing her to death. This sequence underscores the film's self-referential horror, with Darling's killer revealed to be Roman Bridger (Scott Foley), the Stab 3 director orchestrating the murders. Darling's portrayal serves as a satire of Hollywood's heightened caution and paranoia during the in-universe killing spree targeting the Stab 3 cast, exaggerating the industry's blend of bravado and vulnerability in producing exploitative horror sequels. McCarthy noted that her character "wants respect, and she's not getting it," emphasizing Darling's spirited yet undervalued presence in the ensemble alongside established stars like Jennifer Jolie. Exclusive to Scream 3, Darling's brief but memorable role contributes to the film's commentary on fame, typecasting, and the blurring of fiction and reality in the entertainment world.

Steven Stone

Steven Stone is a minor character in the 2000 slasher film Scream 3, the third entry in the Scream film series directed by Wes Craven. Portrayed by actor Patrick Warburton, Stone functions as a physically imposing bodyguard hired to protect actress Jennifer Jolie amid the latest Ghostface killing spree targeting Hollywood figures involved in the Stab 3 production. His role emphasizes brute strength and overconfidence, contrasting with the more investigative protagonists, as he dismisses concerns from law enforcement like Dewey Riley by nicknaming him "Dewdrop" and asserting his professional superiority. Throughout the film, Stone's duties are limited to securing perimeters and monitoring for threats at key locations, such as the Stab 3 studio and Jennifer's residence, where he briefly confronts Gale Weathers for eavesdropping. He appears exclusively in Scream 3, serving as an early victim to heighten tension by demonstrating Ghostface's ability to overpower even armed security. Stone's death occurs during a routine patrol outside Jennifer Jolie's home, underscoring the vulnerability of hired protection in the franchise's narrative. Ambushed by Ghostface (later revealed as Roman Bridger), he is stabbed in the back with a knife, then kicked against a wall to drive the blade deeper, before being bludgeoned unconscious with repeated blows from a frying pan to the head. This brutal sequence, depicted in the film's "Back Stabber" scene, marks him as the fourth victim of the third killing spree and highlights the killer's resourcefulness in using improvised weapons.

Tom Prinze

Tom Prinze is a minor character in the 2000 film Scream 3, portrayed by actor Matt Keeslar. He is cast as Dewey Riley, the role previously played by David Schwimmer in the first two Stab films, in the in-universe meta-horror movie Stab 3: Return to Woodsboro. Prinze appears early in the film on the Stab 3 set, displaying a sarcastic and self-aware personality as he interacts with real-life characters like Gale Weathers and the actual Dewey Riley, commenting on the absurdity of Hollywood's pop culture fixation. Prinze's role underscores the film's meta-commentary on the horror genre and its commodification in Hollywood, as his character parodies the enduring appeal of Dewey Riley's archetype from the original Scream events. During a gathering at actress Jennifer Jolie's mansion, Ghostface targets the Stab 3 cast in a manner mimicking their on-screen fates. Prinze becomes the fifth victim of the Hollywood murders when he returns inside the house to retrieve a taunting fax from the killer; unaware that Ghostface has ignited a gas leak throughout the building, he lights a cigarette, triggering a massive explosion that kills him instantly. This elaborate trap highlights the killer's ingenuity in subverting expectations, as Prinze never directly confronts Ghostface before his death. Exclusive to Scream 3, Prinze's demise reinforces the trilogy's theme of blurring lines between fiction and reality, eliminating an actor embodying a "survivor" role to heighten tension for the protagonists.

Tyson Fox

Tyson Fox is a fictional character featured exclusively in the 2000 slasher film Scream 3, the third entry in the Scream franchise directed by Wes Craven. Portrayed by actor Deon Richmond, Tyson is depicted as a cocky Hollywood performer cast in the meta-film Stab 3: Return to Woodsboro in the role of Ricky, a video store clerk serving as a successor to the horror-savvy character from prior installments. Tyson's personality is marked by arrogance and bravado amid the escalating murders on the Stab 3 set, where he frequently taunts fellow actors like Tom Prinze about the Ghostface killings, brushing off threats with quips about his own sexual experience and survival odds. This dismissive attitude underscores his overconfidence, positioning him as a satirical nod to the franchise's earlier archetypes without delving into technical horror lore. During the film's finale at producer John Milton's mansion, Tyson confronts Ghostface—later unmasked as director Roman Bridger—on an upper-level balcony while fleeing an attack on the group. Stabbed repeatedly in the chest and abdomen during the struggle, he is ultimately hurled over the railing, plummeting to his death on the floor below.

Introduced in Scream 4 (2011)

Anthony Perkins and Ross Hoss

Anthony Perkins and Ross Hoss are minor characters in the 2011 slasher film Scream 4, depicted as a pair of bumbling deputies in the Woodsboro Police Department. Portrayed by Anthony Anderson and Adam Brody, respectively, they provide comic relief through their casual banter about horror movie tropes while assisting in the investigation of a new string of Ghostface murders. The character's name Anthony Perkins serves as a deliberate nod to the actor who originated Norman Bates in Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho (1960), enhancing the film's meta-commentary on slasher conventions. Assigned to guard Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell) after a threatening message is discovered in her rental car, Perkins and Hoss represent the local law enforcement's inept response to the escalating killings. Under the supervision of Sheriff Dewey Riley (David Arquette) and Deputy Judy Hicks (Marley Shelton), they briefly patrol the area around the Roberts family home, where Sidney is staying. In a humorous exchange inside their patrol car, Hoss laments the poor fate of cops in films, quipping, "It sucks to be a cop in movies, unless you're Bruce Willis," a line that underscores Brody's recent role alongside Willis in Cop Out (2010). During the murder of Olivia Morris (Marielle Jaffe), the deputies spot a figure resembling Ghostface two houses away and split up to pursue, leaving their post unattended and allowing the killer to strike unimpeded. Later, while stationed outside the Roberts home in their cruiser, they become victims of a sudden Ghostface ambush. Hoss is stabbed first and collapses, followed by Perkins being impaled through the forehead with a knife; in a darkly comedic twist, Perkins staggers from the vehicle, attempts to draw his weapon, and mutters a final quip before succumbing to his wounds. Their rapid demises highlight the vulnerability of supporting law enforcement characters in the franchise, contrasting with the survival of more central figures like Hicks. Perkins and Hoss appear exclusively in Scream 4, with no further mentions in subsequent entries.

Charlie Walker

Charlie Walker is a fictional character and the secondary antagonist of the 2011 slasher film Scream 4, the fourth entry in the Scream series directed by Wes Craven. Portrayed by Rory Culkin, Charlie is a Woodsboro High School student and president of the film club, depicted as an obsessive horror movie enthusiast with encyclopedic knowledge of the in-universe Stab franchise, which chronicles the events of prior Scream films. Described in casting breakdowns as "messy cute" and somewhat cocky, he positions himself as a modern counterpart to Randy Meeks from the original Scream, though he rejects the "nerd" label while exhibiting clear stalkerish tendencies toward classmate Kirby Reed, on whom he harbors an unrequited crush. Culkin prepared for the role by rehearsing behind the Ghostface mask off-camera and aimed to humanize the character through internal conflict, envisioning Charlie as remorseful and tearful after each kill to explore the psychological "why" behind his violence, adding vulnerability absent in typical slasher villains. Throughout Scream 4, Charlie emerges as a co-Ghostface killer alongside Jill Roberts, driven by his fixation on Kirby and a twisted ambition to recreate the iconic horror narratives he idolizes. His notable actions include repeatedly stabbing Kirby Reed during an attack at her home. Charlie appears exclusively in Scream 4 and does not return in subsequent films.

Jenny Randall and Marnie Cooper

Jenny Randall and Marnie Cooper are minor characters in the 2011 slasher film Scream 4, introduced as the film's opening victims to reestablish the franchise's signature taunting kills in a modern context. They are depicted as best friends and high school students in Woodsboro, spending time at Jenny's home while watching entries in the in-universe Stab film series. Their scene updates the horror genre's self-awareness, with the characters referencing classic tropes before falling victim to them. Portrayed by Aimee Teegarden as Jenny Randall and Britt Robertson as Marnie Cooper, the duo receives menacing phone calls from the Ghostface killer, voiced by Roger L. Jackson, who quizzes them on horror movie rules in a nod to earlier installments. Marnie arrives at Jenny's house for what begins as a casual hangout but quickly escalates when the calls turn threatening, prompting Marnie to investigate noises inside the home. Pursued by the masked Ghostface, Marnie flees to the garage, where she is attacked off-screen; her corpse is then hoisted via the garage door mechanism and hurled through a window onto Jenny below. Jenny, hiding after her own call, is stunned by the falling body and stabbed repeatedly in the stomach and back by Ghostface, ultimately tumbling out the window to her death. The sequence emphasizes brutal, inventive kills, with Marnie hung and Jenny skewered in a multi-stage attack that heightens tension through the characters' failed attempts to escape using cell phones and home security. Their deaths parallel the iconic opening murder of Casey Becker in the 1996 original Scream, refreshing the formula for the reboot era with added meta layers. Jenny and Marnie appear exclusively in Scream 4 and do not return in subsequent films.

Jill Roberts

Jill Roberts is a fictional character and the primary antagonist in the 2011 slasher film Scream 4, portrayed by actress Emma Roberts. As Sidney Prescott's cousin, she resides in Woodsboro with her mother, Kate Roberts, and becomes entangled in a new wave of Ghostface murders marking the 15th anniversary of the original killings. Jill initially presents herself as a typical high school student and aspiring final girl, idolizing her cousin's survival story while navigating personal frustrations, including a strained family dynamic and a cheating ex-boyfriend, Trevor Sheldon. Driven by an obsessive desire for fame in the internet age, Jill masterminds a copycat killing spree to position herself as the heroic survivor of a modern massacre, surpassing Sidney's legacy. She recruits Charlie Walker as her accomplice, using him as a pawn in her scheme while exerting dominant control over the killings to ensure her narrative dominance. This self-aggrandizing leadership stems from deep-seated envy toward Sidney's notoriety, prompting Jill to meticulously stage attacks that eliminate rivals and build her image as the new final girl. Throughout Scream 4, Jill participates in several murders alongside Charlie, including the stabbing of Deputy Dewey Riley, whom she shoots to incapacitate. Her plan unravels during the climax when she betrays and kills Charlie to claim sole credit, but she is ultimately defeated by Sidney, who uses a defibrillator and a gunshot to the heart to end her rampage. Jill appears exclusively in Scream 4 and does not return in subsequent films.

Judy Hicks

Judy Hicks is a fictional character in the Scream film series, portrayed by actress Marley Shelton. Introduced in Scream 4 (2011), she serves as a deputy sheriff in Woodsboro under her husband, Dewey Riley, demonstrating competence and concern for the town's safety amid the Ghostface killings. Her marriage to Dewey is briefly referenced, highlighting her supportive role in his law enforcement career. In Scream 4, Hicks survives multiple attacks by the killers, Jill Roberts and Charlie Walker, establishing her as a resilient figure who aids in the investigation while protecting her son, Wes, to whom she acts as a protective maternal figure. Promoted to sheriff by Scream (2022), she continues her arc as a dedicated law enforcement officer, coordinating responses to the new wave of murders and showing maternal instincts toward Wes during the escalating threats. Hicks meets her demise in Scream (2022) when she is stabbed multiple times in the stomach by Ghostface killer Amber Freeman at her home, shortly after arriving to check on Wes following a suspicious call. This death underscores her vulnerability despite her authority, paralleling classic Scream tropes of law enforcement figures falling to the masked assailant.

Kate Roberts

Kate Roberts is a supporting character in the 2011 horror film Scream 4, portrayed by actress Mary McDonnell. She serves as the overprotective mother of Jill Roberts and the aunt of Sidney Prescott, being the younger sister of the late Maureen Prescott. Roberts appears exclusively in Scream 4, where her limited screen time emphasizes her familial bonds and concern for her daughter's safety amid the escalating Ghostface killings in Woodsboro. McDonnell's performance brings a layer of grounded maternal intensity to the role, highlighting Roberts' efforts to shield her family during moments of crisis. In the film, Kate Roberts demonstrates her overprotective nature early on by hosting her niece Sidney at her home while Sidney promotes her self-help book in town, creating a temporary safe haven for the family. She briefly interacts with Sidney and Jill, showing subtle resentment toward Sidney's past traumas but prioritizing their collective protection as threats mount. This maternal dynamic underscores her role as a civilian parent caught in the cycle of violence, contrasting with more authoritative figures in the series. Her character adds emotional weight to the Roberts family unit, though her arc is tragically brief. Kate Roberts meets her demise in a shocking home invasion sequence, stabbed to death by Ghostface through the mail slot of her front door. As Sidney, Jill, and Kate attempt to barricade themselves inside and flee from the masked killer, Kate positions herself to block the entrance, only for the assailant to thrust a knife through the slot and into the back of her neck, causing her to collapse lifelessly. This quick, inventive kill occurs in the midst of the chaos at the Roberts household, amplifying the film's tension and the vulnerability of parental figures.

Kirby Reed

Kirby Reed is a fictional character in the Scream film series, portrayed by actress Hayden Panettiere. Introduced in Scream 4 (2011), she serves as a sarcastic high school friend of Jill Roberts, Sidney Prescott's cousin, and emerges as a knowledgeable horror film enthusiast with a confident, witty demeanor that subverts typical side character tropes. Her role highlights a blend of nerdy passion for genre conventions and resilient coolness, making her a fan-favorite for her relatable empathy and self-assuredness amid the Woodsboro killings. In Scream 4, Kirby faces a brutal attack when stabbed multiple times by Ghostface killer Charlie Walker at her home, leaving her bleeding and unresponsive on the floor, with her ultimate fate left deliberately ambiguous as no body is shown. This open-ended conclusion fueled fan speculation for over a decade, positioning her as a potential survivor who embodies the series' meta-commentary on horror survivors' resilience. Her close friendship with Olivia Morris underscores her social circle within the teen group targeted by the killers. Kirby reappears in the Scream revival era, with her survival confirmed through a subtle cameo reference in Scream (2022), where a Variety interview sidebar mentions "Woodsboro survivor Kirby Reed," dispelling doubts about her demise. She makes a full return in Scream VI (2023), reimagined as a seasoned FBI agent in New York City who assists protagonists Sam and Tara Carpenter during a new string of Ghostface murders, drawing on her past trauma and horror expertise to mentor the group. In this installment, Kirby survives the attacks, solidifying her evolution from a presumed victim to a heroic figure who challenges the franchise's fatalistic patterns for secondary characters.

Olivia Morris

Olivia Morris is a fictional character in the Scream film series, introduced as a supporting role in Scream 4 (2011). She is portrayed by actress Marielle Jaffe, who was cast in the role in June 2010. Olivia serves as a popular high school senior at Woodsboro High and a close friend to Jill Roberts and Kirby Reed, often depicted as part of their social trio. In the film, Olivia embodies the archetype of the attractive, girly "hot girl" among her peers, contrasting with more tomboyish friends in the group. She resides next door to Jill and frequently hangs out with her and Kirby at Jill's house. Early in Scream 4, Olivia becomes a target during a group video chat when Ghostface taunts the friends over the phone, specifically directing threats toward her closet and escalating the tension. Olivia's arc culminates in a brutal death scene at her home, where she is viciously gutted after investigating the disturbance, marking one of the franchise's most graphic kills with her body left displayed on her bed, entrails exposed. This sequence, witnessed remotely by Jill and Kirby, underscores the film's update to early-victim tropes for the social media era. Olivia does not appear in any subsequent Scream installments.

Rebecca Walters

Rebecca Walters is a supporting character in the 2011 slasher film Scream 4, the fourth installment in the Scream series directed by Wes Craven. Portrayed by actress Alison Brie, she serves as Sidney Prescott's publicist and accompanies her to Woodsboro to promote Sidney's bestselling self-help book Out of the Darkness: My Journey Through Darkness. Walters is characterized as an ambitious, acerbic professional with a sharp edge, eager to capitalize on the media attention surrounding the new string of Ghostface murders. In the story, Walters interacts with local authorities, including Sheriff Judy Hicks, during the escalating investigation, while pursuing her own angle on the events. She plans to write an exposé on Sidney's return to Woodsboro and the killings, viewing it as a prime opportunity for publicity, much like the journalistic pursuits seen in characters such as Gale Weathers. Her role highlights the media's exploitative side amid the horror, positioning her as a skeptical outsider dismissive of the immediate dangers. Walters meets her demise in a shocking attack at the Woodsboro police station. Ambushed by Ghostface (revealed to be Charlie Walker), she is stabbed multiple times while attempting to flee and then thrown from the second-floor ledge, her body crashing onto a news van below during a press conference. This graphic death underscores the franchise's theme of vulnerability in familiar settings and marks one of the reshot scenes added to heighten tension. Walters appears exclusively in Scream 4 and does not return in subsequent films.

Robbie Mercer

Robbie Mercer is a fictional character in the 2011 slasher film Scream 4, portrayed by Canadian actor Erik Knudsen. A senior at Woodsboro High School, Mercer serves as a supporting character and avid horror film enthusiast who embodies the tech-savvy younger generation in the franchise. As vice president of the school's Audio Visual Club—a group focused on film and media production—Mercer shares a passion for cinema with fellow member Charlie Walker. He hosts a webcast series called Hall Pass with Robbie, using a flip camera and headset to livestream and document school life in a point-of-view style, often interviewing peers about their favorite scary movies during casual encounters in hallways. This gadgetry highlights his role as a modern analog to earlier Scream characters, integrating real-time broadcasting into the horror narrative as a commentary on evolving media consumption. Mercer appears exclusively in Scream 4, where he attends a party at classmate Kirby Reed's house following a string of murders. After separating from the group to retrieve a beer, he is attacked by Ghostface in the kitchen and stabbed in the chest and throat, collapsing fatally on the floor. His death underscores the film's themes of vulnerability in the digital age, as his livestream equipment fails to save him from the killer.

Trevor Sheldon

Trevor Sheldon is a supporting character in the 2011 slasher film Scream 4, the fourth installment in the Scream franchise. Portrayed by actor Nico Tortorella, he serves as a stereotypical high school jock and represents the archetype of a disposable teen love interest in the series' meta-horror narrative. As a senior at Woodsboro High School, Trevor is introduced as the ex-boyfriend of protagonist Jill Roberts, with their breakup stemming from his infidelity shortly before the new Ghostface killing spree begins. He expresses a desire to win her back during group discussions among the teen suspects, flirting with other girls like Jenny Randall while navigating the escalating murders. Trevor's personality is depicted as somewhat shallow and cowardly, prioritizing his social status over genuine loyalty, though he shows fleeting moments of bravery in confronting the dangers around him. In the film's finale, Trevor becomes a key victim when Jill shoots him in the groin and then the head, framing him posthumously as part of the killer's deception. His death underscores the franchise's subversion of slasher tropes, eliminating the seemingly safe "jock boyfriend" early in the climax. Trevor appears exclusively in Scream 4 and does not return in subsequent entries.

Introduced in Scream (2022)

Amber Freeman

Amber Freeman is a fictional character and one of the primary antagonists in the 2022 film Scream, portrayed by actress Mikey Madison. She serves as Tara Carpenter's close friend and a member of her friend group in Woodsboro, initially appearing as a supportive teenager amid a new wave of Ghostface murders. Freeman is revealed as one of the two Ghostface killers, operating as an accomplice to her boyfriend Richie Kirsch in a plot driven by their fanatic obsession with the Stab film series. Freeman's violent actions include shooting and stabbing Tara Carpenter in the film's opening attack, which sets off the events of the requel. She later murders Dewey Riley by stabbing him multiple times during a confrontation at his trailer, marking a significant kill in the franchise as the first to successfully eliminate the veteran character. Her rampage continues with attempts on the lives of Sidney Prescott, Gale Weathers, and Sam Carpenter, showcasing her ruthless commitment to their scheme. As part of the killer duo with Richie Kirsch, Freeman embodies a deranged superfan archetype, using her proximity to the core group to manipulate suspicions. In the climax, Freeman is shot in the chest by Gale Weathers, causing her to catch fire and suffer severe burns while attempting to continue her assault. She is ultimately killed when Tara shoots her in the head. Freeman appears exclusively in Scream (2022) and does not return in subsequent entries.

Chad Meeks-Martin

Chad Meeks-Martin is a fictional character in the Scream film series, portrayed by actor Mason Gooding. Introduced in Scream (2022) as a student at Woodsboro High School and a member of the football team, Chad is depicted as a stereotypical jock with a confident demeanor, yet he demonstrates awareness of horror movie tropes through his familial connection to film geek Randy Meeks. He is the twin brother of Mindy Meeks-Martin. In Scream (2022), Chad becomes part of the "Core Four"—a nickname he coins for the tight-knit group of survivors including himself, Mindy, Sam Carpenter, and Tara Carpenter—after enduring the Woodsboro killings. During the film's climax at Stu Macher's former residence, Chad is ambushed by Ghostface (revealed as Amber Freeman) and stabbed six times in the torso and back, leaving him gravely injured and bleeding out on the lawn. Despite the severity of his wounds, he is rushed to the hospital and ultimately survives, recovering in time to appear in the epilogue. Chad reprises his role in Scream VI (2023), where the Core Four relocates to New York City for a fresh start, only to face a new Ghostface threat. In the film's climactic apartment confrontation, he is attacked simultaneously by two Ghostfaces (Quinn Bailey and Ethan Landry), who stab him multiple times, turning him into what the writers describe as a "human pincushion" before abandoning him to die. Miraculously, Chad once again defies fatal injuries, receiving medical attention and recovering fully by the end. Mason Gooding is set to return as Chad in Scream 7, scheduled for theatrical release on February 27, 2026.

Liv McKenzie

Liv McKenzie is a fictional character in the 2022 slasher film Scream, portrayed by French actress and model Sonia Ammar. She serves as a supporting character among the group of high school friends in Woodsboro, depicted as a sociable partygoer who participates in the film's climactic gathering at Stu Macher's former house. McKenzie is introduced as the girlfriend of Chad Meeks-Martin, integrating her into the core teen ensemble navigating the new Ghostface killings. Throughout the film, McKenzie embodies the "party girl" archetype typical of the Scream series, engaging in lighthearted banter and flirtatious interactions amid rising tension from the murders. Her role highlights the casual dismissal of horror movie rules by the younger characters, as she mocks the ongoing spree during social scenes. McKenzie appears exclusively in Scream (2022), with no presence in prior or subsequent installments of the franchise. McKenzie meets a sudden and violent end during the party's chaos, when she is shot in the head by Amber Freeman, one of the film's revealed killers. This graphic death occurs in the living room, punctuating the shift to the story's third act, as Amber declares, "Welcome to act three!" The scene underscores the franchise's tradition of shocking eliminations for seemingly peripheral characters.

Mindy Meeks-Martin

Mindy Meeks-Martin is a fictional character in the ''Scream'' film series, debuting as a supporting character in the fifth installment, ''Scream'' (2022), and becoming a protagonist in its sequels. Portrayed by Jasmin Savoy Brown, she is depicted as a film student and avid horror enthusiast at Blackmore University, serving as a modern successor to the franchise's archetype of the genre-savvy expert. As a queer Black woman, Mindy represents the series' evolving commitment to diverse representation among its core survivors. She is the niece of Randy Meeks, the original horror rules explainer from the early films. A key member of the "Core Four"—alongside her twin brother Chad Meeks-Martin, Sam Carpenter, and Tara Carpenter—Mindy provides analytical warnings throughout the killings, updating the survival guidelines for "requels," a term she coins to describe films that blend legacy sequels with reboots. In ''Scream'' (2022), she elucidates these rules during a gathering, emphasizing larger-scale threats and the targeting of original characters' relatives, while later deducing the killers' motives tied to a fictional film within the series. During a party at Amber Freeman's house, Mindy is ambushed and stabbed in the back by Ghostface but fights back fiercely, unmasking the attacker momentarily before surviving her injuries and being hospitalized. In ''Scream VI'' (2023), Mindy relocates to New York City with the Core Four and continues her role as the group's strategic voice, outlining escalated rules for legacy characters and predicting the killers' university-based vendetta. While riding a subway, she is targeted again by Ghostface, who stabs her in the stomach amid a chaotic attack on the group; Mindy survives after receiving medical attention and later accurately identifies the perpetrators—Ethan Landry, Quinn Bailey, and Detective Bailey—upon their arrival at the scene. Brown reprises the role in the upcoming seventh film, ''Scream 7'' (2026), reuniting Mindy with her brother Chad amid the continuing saga.

Richie Kirsch

Richie Kirsch is a fictional character in the 2022 slasher film Scream, portrayed by actor Jack Quaid. Introduced as the supportive boyfriend of protagonist Sam Carpenter, Richie accompanies her back to Woodsboro, California, after her sister Tara is attacked by Ghostface, positioning him within the core group of suspects and friends. His affable, enthusiastic demeanor masks a deeper obsession with the Stab film franchise, a meta-series based on the Woodsboro murders, which he frequently references in conversations. As the film unfolds, Richie is revealed as one of the two mastermind killers behind the new Ghostface attacks, partnering with Amber Freeman, whom he met on a Stab subreddit dedicated to extreme fandom. Motivated by frustration with the Stab sequels' perceived decline in quality, Richie orchestrates the murders to generate authentic material for a "requel"—a reboot-sequel hybrid—that he secretly writes as a script, aiming to inspire a revival of the franchise by emulating its original structure. He actively participates in the killings, including luring Mindy Meeks-Martin to the basement to don the Ghostface costume and stabbing Sam during the climactic confrontation at Stu Macher's former home. In the finale, after his identity is exposed, Richie attempts to murder Sam but is overpowered; she stabs him repeatedly, slits his throat, and shoots him in the head to ensure his death, echoing the franchise's tradition of definitive killer demises. Richie appears exclusively in Scream (2022) and does not return in subsequent entries.

Sam Carpenter

Sam Carpenter is a fictional character and one of the protagonists in the Scream film series, portrayed by Mexican actress Melissa Barrera. Introduced in Scream (2022), she serves as the half-sister of Tara Carpenter, sharing the same mother but having different fathers, and returns to Woodsboro, California, after learning of Tara's attack by Ghostface. As the secret daughter of original Scream killer Billy Loomis, Sam grapples with her inherited "Loomis traits," including hallucinations of her father and a emerging bloodlust that influences her survival instincts. In Scream (2022), Sam leads a group of friends—including Tara, Mindy Meeks-Martin, Chad Meeks-Martin, and her boyfriend Richie Kirsch—against a new pair of Ghostface killers targeting them in Woodsboro. Haunted by her paternal legacy, she experiences visions of Billy that guide her during confrontations, ultimately stabbing and killing Richie after his reveal as one of the attackers. Her actions establish her as a new "final girl" figure, blending vulnerability from her mental health struggles with fierce protectiveness toward her sister and allies. Barrera has discussed how the role was originally written for a white actress, but she advocated for changes to reflect her own background, adding depth to Sam's complex, morally gray persona. Sam returns in Scream VI (2023), where she relocates to New York City with Tara and the "Core Four" group, continuing to lead them against another set of Ghostface killers amid escalating threats. Embracing her darker heritage more deliberately, she shoots Quinn Bailey in the head and stabs her father Detective Wayne Bailey over 30 times during the finale, demonstrating an evolution from reluctant violence to empowered aggression. Her leadership is pivotal in coordinating escapes and counterattacks, solidifying her role as the franchise's central survivor alongside Tara. Following Scream VI, Barrera was fired from the series in November 2023 by Spyglass Media Group over social media posts deemed antisemitic, preventing Sam Carpenter's return in Scream 7, which began production in 2025 without the character. Prior to her exit, Barrera expressed interest in exploring Sam's duality and mental health further in future installments.

Tara Carpenter

Tara Carpenter is a fictional character in the Scream film series, introduced as a central figure in the requel era. Portrayed by actress Jenna Ortega, she is depicted as a resilient high school student and half-sister to Sam Carpenter, embodying the youthful impulsiveness of a teen navigating trauma in the face of escalating Ghostface attacks. In Scream (2022), Tara serves as the opening victim, ambushed in her Woodsboro home by Ghostface during a phone call that tests her knowledge of horror tropes. Stabbed multiple times in a brutal assault, she fights back fiercely, locking doors and alerting authorities via her phone, ultimately surviving after a harrowing struggle that leaves her hospitalized. This incident draws her estranged sister Sam back to town, pulling Tara into a group dynamic with friends as they seek revenge and unravel the killers' motives, highlighting her transition from vulnerable target to determined survivor. Tara reprises her role in Scream VI (2023), where she relocates to New York City with Sam and their circle for a fresh start at college, attempting to reclaim normalcy through parties and relationships, including dating Chad Meeks-Martin. Her impulsiveness shines as she copes with lingering trauma by embracing distractions, but she faces another direct confrontation with Ghostface during a tense subway escape and a later attack, once again surviving through quick thinking and group support. This installment underscores her evolution into a fighter within the "Core Four" survivors, blending teen rebellion with the series' meta-commentary on horror resilience. Ortega does not reprise the role in Scream 7 (2026), following her exit from the project.

Vince Schneider

Vince Schneider is a minor character in the 2022 film Scream, portrayed by actor Kyle Gallner. He serves as an early red herring suspect, positioned as a creepy and antagonistic figure with ties to the franchise's legacy as the nephew of original Ghostface killer Stu Macher. Schneider appears exclusively in the fifth installment, contributing to the escalating tension in Woodsboro by embodying the town's lingering connections to past murders. In the film, Schneider antagonizes the core group of young characters during a confrontation at a local bar. Having a prior romantic history with Liv McKenzie, he aggressively approaches her and her boyfriend Chad Meeks-Martin, escalating the situation by pulling a knife and punching Dewey Riley, leading to his ejection from the premises. This outburst highlights his invasive and threatening demeanor, fueling suspicions about his potential involvement in the new killings. Schneider meets his demise shortly after the bar incident, stabbed in the neck by Ghostface—later revealed to be Amber Freeman—while leaning against his car outside. His quick elimination underscores the film's pattern of dispatching early suspects, dispelling notions of his guilt while advancing the plot through another brutal slasher sequence.

Wes Hicks

Wes Hicks is a fictional character in the Scream film series, appearing exclusively in Scream (2022). Portrayed by actor Dylan Minnette, he is introduced as a high school student in Woodsboro and the son of returning character Sheriff Judy Hicks. Positioned as the cautious "new guy" among his friend group, including Tara Carpenter on whom he harbors a crush, Wes demonstrates awareness of the Stab meta-narratives and prioritizes safety amid the resurgent Ghostface attacks. His mother provides him with defensive items like a taser and pepper spray to navigate the dangers, underscoring his vigilant personality. Wes's arc culminates in his death at the hands of Ghostface during an assault on the Hicks home. Following Judy's fatal encounter outside, an unaware Wes—emerging from the shower—is stabbed through the neck by the killer as he reaches for his taser, rendering his preparations futile. This early gutting heightens tension for the survivors and marks him as the first core teen casualty.

Introduced in Scream VI (2023)

Anika Kayoko

Anika Kayoko is a fictional character in the Scream film series, introduced in Scream VI (2023) as a supporting member of the core group of friends navigating life in New York City after the Woodsboro murders. Portrayed by Canadian actress Devyn Nekoda, Anika is depicted as a student at Blackmore University and the girlfriend of Mindy Meeks-Martin, contributing to the group's expanded Core Four dynamic alongside Sam and Tara Carpenter. Her role emphasizes supportive relationships and diversity within the ensemble, marking her as the first Asian character to be killed by Ghostface in the franchise. Anika's primary appearance occurs during the escalating attacks by a new trio of Ghostface killers in Scream VI. She joins the group for a gathering at Sam and Tara's apartment, where tensions rise amid suspicions of betrayal. When Ghostface (later revealed as Ethan Landry, played by Jack Champion) invades, Anika is stabbed in the leg and abdomen, forcing her to attempt an escape by crawling across a makeshift ladder bridge spanning the gap between buildings to reach Danny Brackett's neighboring apartment. Unbeknownst to Anika, who had trusted Ethan as a friend from the film studies class, he follows and sabotages the ladder by cutting its supports, causing it to collapse. She plummets several stories, striking her head on fire escapes and railings before hitting the ground below, resulting in a prolonged and graphic death that underscores the killers' brutality. This sequence highlights Anika's vulnerability as a peripheral yet endearing figure in the group, amplifying the emotional stakes for the survivors. Anika does not appear in subsequent films in the series.

Danny Brackett

Danny Brackett is a supporting character in the 2023 slasher film Scream VI, the sixth installment in the Scream franchise. Portrayed by Josh Segarra, he is introduced as the neighbor of Sam Carpenter and her sister Tara in their New York City apartment building. Danny develops a romantic relationship with Sam, serving as her secret boyfriend and providing a contrasting dynamic to the franchise's history of treacherous male love interests. His proximity to the core group initially positions him as a potential suspect in the Ghostface murders, heightening tension amid the killings targeting the sisters and their friends. However, Danny is cleared of suspicion and revealed as an innocent ally. In the film's finale, Danny assists the survivors during the confrontation with the killers, including an improvised moment where he confronts Ghostface directly, and he ultimately survives the events. Exclusive to Scream VI, the character offers a rare positive portrayal of a surviving male partner in the series.

Dr. Christopher Stone

Dr. Christopher Stone is a minor character in the 2023 slasher film Scream VI, serving as a psychiatrist based in New York City. He is portrayed by Canadian actor Henry Czerny, known for roles in films like Mission: Impossible and Clear and Present Danger. In the story, Stone provides therapeutic support to patient Sam Carpenter, addressing her psychological struggles related to her family's history with the Woodsboro killers. Stone's professional role highlights the theme of mental health in the Scream franchise, where he attempts to help Sam manage her inherited trauma from Billy Loomis, but his involvement draws him into the orbit of the new Ghostface attacks. His sessions underscore the film's exploration of survivor's guilt and identity, though he remains a peripheral figure focused on clinical detachment. During the escalating murders in New York, Stone becomes a target and is murdered at his home by Wayne Bailey/Ghostface, who stabs him through the front door and then fatally stabs him in the face after breaking in. The attack occurs as part of the killers' plan to eliminate potential links to Sam's past, with Stone stabbed multiple times in a graphic sequence that emphasizes the franchise's signature violence. His death serves to heighten tension among the core group of survivors, prompting further investigation into the perpetrators' motives.

Ethan Landry

Ethan Landry is a fictional character in the Scream film series, appearing exclusively in Scream VI (2023) as a student at Blackmore University and one of the Ghostface killers. Portrayed by Jack Champion, Ethan initially presents as a shy, awkward freshman and roommate to Chad Meeks-Martin, integrating into the friend group of survivors from the previous killings while hiding his true identity as a co-conspirator in the murder spree. He pretends to be the brother of Richie Kirsch, the killer from the prior film, to infiltrate the group and build false trust. Throughout Scream VI, Ethan maintains a low-profile facade, attending classes and social events to establish alibis, such as being in economics class during key attacks and accompanying Mindy Meeks-Martin on the subway where she is stabbed. As Ghostface, he participates in the apartment assault on the core group, where he kills Anika Kayoko by stabbing her and shoving her off a ladder, leading to her fatal fall into a dumpster below—one of the film's most graphic deaths. Ethan is also responsible for the off-screen murder of Quinn Bailey's boyfriend to facilitate the plot's deception. In the climactic confrontation at the Ghostface shrine, Ethan's killer role is unmasked, leading to a brutal showdown. He attempts to murder Sam Carpenter and Tara Carpenter but is repeatedly stabbed in the chest by Sam, weakening him severely. Despite this, he lunges again, only for Tara to stab him in the mouth and twist the knife, before Kirby Reed finishes him by dropping a television on his head, echoing a death from the original Scream.

Jason Carvey and Greg Bruckner

Jason Carvey and Greg Bruckner serve as brief antagonists in Scream VI (2023), depicted as aspiring filmmakers and Ghostface copycats who briefly don the iconic mask to advance a personal vendetta tied to the franchise's lore. Carvey is portrayed by Tony Revolori, known for roles in Spider-Man: No Way Home, while Bruckner is played by Thom Newell in his feature film debut. Both characters appear exclusively in this installment, functioning as roommates and film students at Blackmore University in New York City, where they idolize previous killers and aim to complete an unfinished script inspired by the events of the prior film. As self-proclaimed successors to the Ghostface mantle, Carvey and Bruckner launch the film's murder spree by targeting their professor, Laura Crane, whom Carvey catfishes via a dating app before ambushing and stabbing her repeatedly in a brutal opening kill. Their motive stems from a desire to emulate and extend the cinematic chaos depicted in the Stab series, positioning themselves as fan-driven killers eager to "finish the movie" left behind by a prior antagonist. This act establishes them as interim threats, highlighting the franchise's theme of obsessive fandom turning violent. Their reign proves fleeting, as the genuine Ghostface killers quickly intervene: Bruckner is dismembered off-screen, his decapitated head later found in a refrigerator by Carvey, who is then lured into a deadly game via phone and stabbed to death in their apartment. Through these early demises, Carvey and Bruckner underscore the dangers of imitation within the Scream universe, serving primarily to mislead audiences and ramp up suspense before the core narrative unfolds.

Laura Crane

Laura Crane is a minor character in the 2023 slasher film Scream VI, portrayed by Australian actress Samara Weaving. She serves as a film studies professor at Blackmore University in New York City, specializing in the slasher genre, and has recently joined the faculty to teach relevant courses. As an educator, Crane maintains academic ties to the Core Four—a group of students including Sam Carpenter, Tara Carpenter, Mindy Meeks-Martin, and Chad Meeks-Martin—who attend her classes on horror films. Her role highlights the film's thematic exploration of meta-commentary on the slasher trope, positioning her as a knowledgeable mentor figure within the university setting. Crane appears exclusively in Scream VI, where she becomes the opening kill. After meeting a stranger for a date arranged online, she is lured into a dark alley and brutally stabbed multiple times by Jason Carvey, a student disguised as Ghostface, in a scene that establishes the film's violent tone.

Quinn Bailey

Quinn Bailey is a fictional character in the 2023 slasher film Scream VI, the sixth installment in the Scream franchise. She is portrayed by American actress Liana Liberato, who joined the cast to play the role of Sam and Tara Carpenter's outgoing roommate at Blackmore University in New York City. Initially presented as a sassy, sex-positive young woman who bonds with the group, Bailey's character arc reveals her as one of the film's primary antagonists, operating as a Ghostface killer alongside her family members. Throughout the story, Bailey fakes her own death early on to evade suspicion, allowing her to continue her covert activities as part of the killer duo terrorizing the protagonists. Her father is NYPD detective Wayne Bailey. As a co-Ghostface, she participates in the murders, taunting survivor Gale Weathers about Dewey Riley's death from the previous killings during a phone call. Later, Bailey directly attacks Gale by shooting her in the shoulder during a confrontation. In the climax, Bailey's true allegiance is exposed when she joins the other killers in the theater ambush. She is ultimately killed by Sam Carpenter, who shoots her in the head after a brutal fight. Bailey appears exclusively in Scream VI and does not return in subsequent films.

Wayne Bailey

Wayne Bailey is a fictional character in the Scream film series, appearing as a major antagonist in Scream VI (2023). Portrayed by Dermot Mulroney, Bailey serves as a New York City Police Department detective who initially presents himself as an ally to the protagonists while secretly orchestrating a series of Ghostface murders. As the father of Quinn Bailey, Ethan Landry, and the late Richie Kirsch—Richie being one of the killers from the previous film—Bailey's actions are driven by a deep-seated desire for revenge against Sam Carpenter for killing his son Richie. Throughout Scream VI, Bailey poses as a supportive investigator, assisting Sam, Tara Carpenter, and their friends in probing the new Ghostface attacks at Blackmore University in New York City. He builds trust by sharing insights into the killings and coordinating with Kirby Reed, an FBI agent from earlier entries in the series, all while concealing his role as the mastermind behind the violence alongside his children. Bailey's plan involves framing Sam as the killer, exploiting her connection to Billy Loomis—Richie's idol—to tarnish her reputation and exact familial vengeance. His character draws inspiration from previous authority figures in the franchise, blending professional demeanor with underlying menace, as noted by Mulroney in interviews where he referenced influences like Dewey Riley. In the film's climactic confrontation at a shrine dedicated to the Stab movies, Bailey reveals his true identity as Ghostface, unmasking himself to confront Sam, Tara, and the survivors. He shoots Kirby twice to neutralize her interference, wounding her severely but not fatally, before engaging in a brutal fight with the group. Bailey is ultimately killed by Sam, who stabs him multiple times in the chest—over 30 times—culminating in a fatal blow to the eye, ending his revenge plot. Bailey appears exclusively in Scream VI, marking Mulroney's sole contribution to the franchise to date.

Introduced in Scream 7 (2026)

Tatum Prescott

Tatum Prescott is a fictional character introduced in the Scream film series as the daughter of Sidney Prescott and her husband, Mark Evans. She is portrayed by actress Isabel May in her feature film debut within the franchise. In Scream 7 (2026), Tatum serves as a central figure in the story, which revolves around a new Ghostface killer emerging in the quiet town where Sidney has attempted to build a stable family life. The plot focuses on Sidney's efforts to protect her daughter from becoming the killer's next target, reigniting her long-standing fears from previous attacks. As the film is currently in post-production ahead of its February 27, 2026, theatrical release, specific details about Tatum's arc, including her interactions with returning characters like Gale Weathers, remain under wraps. Tatum has no prior appearances in the Scream series, marking her as a key element of the next-generation legacy established in the seventh installment. Her inclusion honors the original Tatum Riley from the 1996 film, suggesting a thematic nod to the franchise's history of familial and survivorship bonds.

Other New Characters (TBA)

In addition to confirmed returning cast members such as Courteney Cox as Gale Weathers, Scream 7 introduces several new actors whose roles remain undisclosed as of November 2025. Among these debuts are Ethan Embry, known for roles in films like First Man; Anna Camp, recognized from the Pitch Perfect series; Joel McHale, a veteran of Community and The Soup; Mckenna Grace, from Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire; Michelle Randolph, known for 1883; Asa Germann, from The Boys; Celeste O'Connor, of Ghostbusters: Afterlife; Jimmy Tatro, from Home Team; and Mark Consuelos, recognized from Riverdale. Production on the film wrapped principal photography on March 12, 2025, after beginning on January 7, placing it in post-production ahead of its theatrical release on February 27, 2026.

Reception

Critical Analysis of Key Characters

Sidney Prescott's character arc exemplifies the franchise's evolution of the "final girl" archetype, transitioning from a traumatized victim in the 1996 original to a empowered avenger who actively confronts her past across subsequent films. Critics have lauded this development as a feminist progression, highlighting how Sidney's resilience against repeated Ghostface attacks underscores themes of survival and agency in horror cinema. Ghostface's enduring appeal as the series' central villain stems from its meta-commentary on slasher tropes, blending anonymous terror with genre self-awareness that critiques horror conventions while perpetuating them. This duality allows Ghostface to symbolize the inescapable cycle of violence in postmodern storytelling, making the masked killer a cultural icon that evolves with each installment to reflect contemporary fears. Later entries in the franchise, particularly Scream (2022) and Scream VI (2023), introduce characters like Sam Carpenter and Mindy Meeks-Martin to address historical gaps in diversity and representation. Sam, a Latinx protagonist grappling with her serial killer heritage, leads a more inclusive core group, marking a deliberate shift toward broader ethnic and cultural narratives that repair the series' earlier oversights. Mindy, an explicitly queer Black woman and horror aficionado, survives her encounters while providing incisive commentary on franchise "requels," thus challenging the "bury your gays" trope and enhancing LGBTQ+ visibility without tokenism. Male characters such as Dewey Riley have drawn mixed critiques for balancing comic relief with emotional depth, often serving as the franchise's heartfelt everyman whose growth from inept deputy to seasoned survivor humanizes the terror. While early portrayals emphasize his awkward humor, later films delve into his loneliness and loyalty, culminating in his sacrificial death in Scream (2022) that underscores legacy themes of protection and loss. Post-Scream VI, tributes to Dewey highlight his enduring role in bridging old and new generations, critiquing the cost of prolonged exposure to violence. Scholarly examinations of the series reveal recurring trauma cycles originating with Maureen Prescott's rape and murder, which propel intergenerational violence from Sidney to descendants like Sam Carpenter and emerging figures such as Tatum Prescott. This pattern, analyzed through psychoanalytic lenses like repetition-compulsion, illustrates how Maureen's unresolved sins manifest in mediated hauntings and familial betrayals, perpetuating a legacy of PTSD and vengeance across the narrative.

Awards and Nominations for Performances

Performances in the Scream film series have garnered recognition from genre-specific awards bodies, particularly in the late 1990s when the franchise revitalized interest in horror acting accolades. Neve Campbell's portrayal of Sidney Prescott earned her the Saturn Award for Best Actress in 1997 for the original Scream, highlighting her breakthrough as a final girl archetype. She received Saturn Award nominations for Best Actress in 1998 for Scream 2 and in 2001 for Scream 3, underscoring the sustained critical appreciation for her role across the trilogy. Additionally, Campbell won MTV Movie Awards for Best Female Performance in 1998 for Scream 2 and was nominated in the same category in 2000 for Scream 3, with the franchise's iconic scenes, such as Sidney's confrontations with Ghostface, contributing to MTV nods for Best Movie. Courteney Cox's depiction of Gale Weathers also received genre honors, including a nomination for the Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress in 1998 for Scream 2. David Arquette's comedic turn as Dewey Riley contributed to the ensemble's MTV Movie Award win for Best Movie in 1997, celebrating the character's blend of humor and vulnerability that became a series staple. Skeet Ulrich's portrayal of Billy Loomis earned him a Saturn Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor in 1997. In more recent entries, the ensemble cast of Scream (2022) was nominated for Best Movie at the 2022 MTV Movie & TV Awards. Scream VI (2023) won the MTV Movie & TV Award for Best Movie in 2023 and won in the Best Fight category for Courteney Cox's Gale Weathers versus Ghostface. As of November 2025, the Scream films have not secured additional major individual acting awards beyond these recognitions, despite the franchise's continued popularity. The early Scream films significantly elevated acting recognition in indie horror, paving the way for increased genre awards visibility by blending satire with strong character work.

References

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