
Let’s get real—horror movies simply wouldn’t be the same without scream queens. These ladies don’t merely scream and flee; they fight, suffer, and occasionally turn the tables on the beasts pursuing them. Through the decades, they’ve transitioned from cowering victims to resourceful, stalwart survivors who bear entire franchises on their backs. Pop some popcorn (and perhaps leave a light on) while we dissect 10 scream queens who’ve made horror unforgettable.

10. Jenna Ortega – Gen Z’s Horror Darling
Within a few years, Jenna Ortega has emerged as the poster child for contemporary horror. Between X and her leading turn in Scream (and Scream VI), she’s demonstrated she has the skills to scream and fight back. With range and ferocity, Ortega seems the ideal scream queen to usher in a new age for the genre.

9. Melissa Barrera – The Stealth Powerhouse
Melissa Barrera may not always be the loudest name in horror, but she’s consistently one of the strongest presences on screen. Whether it’s her bloody turn in Abigail or her standout performances in the latest Scream films and Ready or Not, she’s steadily building a legacy as one of the defining scream queens of the 2020s.

8. Danielle Harris – Halloween’s MVP
Few scream queens are as closely associated with a horror franchise as Danielle Harris. She’s survived Michael Myers not once, not twice, but four times as Jamie Lloyd and Annie Brackett in the Halloween series. Horror fans love her because she never says no to more, making her one of the genre’s most dedicated (and most durable) scream queens.

7. Vera Farmiga – The Paranormal Icon
When supernatural frights are at stake, Vera Farmiga is the queen. From Orphan to Bates Motel, and particularly as Lorraine Warren in The Conjuring franchise, she’s a household name when it comes to horror. With The Conjuring movies raking in billions globally, Farmiga has earned her place as the queen of ghost stories.

6. Chloë Grace Moretz – The Versatile Veteran
Although she began at a young age, Chloë Grace Moretz already has a horror CV that most actors would kill for. From The Amityville Horror to Let Me In and her icy performance in the Carrie remake, Moretz has shown she can do anything from emotional complexity to full-blown horror. She’s a scream queen with skill and longevity.

5. Sarah Michelle Gellar – Slayer and Survivor
Yes, she’ll always be Buffy the Vampire Slayer, but Sarah Michelle Gellar’s horror resume extends far past the Hellmouth. She battled murderers in I Know What You Did Last Summer and Scream 2, then starred in The Grudge. Gellar’s combination of strength and vulnerability redefined the horror heroine for a generation.

4. Linda Blair – The Possessed Legend
As Regan in The Exorcist, Linda Blair horrified audiences around the globe with one of the most iconic performances in cinema history. Spinning heads, projectile vomiting, and all, Blair was the personification of unadulterated nightmare fuel. Her performance took home awards and became an indelible stamp on horror, cementing her status among the classics.

3. Heather Langenkamp – Freddy’s Worst Nightmare
Heather Langenkamp introduced us to Nancy Thompson, horror’s wisest and most capable Final Girl. Nancy showed that she was the sole individual capable of going head-to-head with Freddy Krueger in A Nightmare on Elm Street and its first two sequels. Langenkamp’s performance became the gold standard for outsmarting a slasher using brains and determination.

2. Neve Campbell – The Self-Aware Survivor
With Sidney Prescott in Scream, Neve Campbell redefined what a Final Girl would be. Clever, aware of herself, and unblinkingly tough, Sidney wasn’t another victim—she was the blueprint for the contemporary survivor within the genre. Campbell’s performance still impacts horror heroines today.

1. Jamie Lee Curtis – The Original (and Eternal) Scream Queen
No list can be complete without Jamie Lee Curtis. Her first appearance as Laurie Strode in Halloween opened up the modern era of slashers, and she continued the tradition with dozens of sequels, the current reboot trilogy, and even the self-aware TV show Scream Queens. From The Fog to Prom Night, Curtis has been a pillar of the genre for decades, and her impact is simply beyond compare.

Scream queens began as delicate victims, but they’ve evolved to become the genre’s strongest influences. Now, they’re survivors, warriors, and leaders—proving horror’s heart will forever beat in them. Whether they’re battling masked murderers, angry spirits, or evil itself, these women encapsulate what horror is exciting.