In 1986, the world fell in love with a 10-year-old girl with very messy brown hair and a muddy-faced stare who went up against Xenomorph creatures and stole scenes from a cast of grown Marines in Aliens with her innocence. The film was James Cameron’s sequel to Ridley Scott’s 1979 sci-fi horror classic Alien. That girl was Carrie Henn. You might know her as Newt. But back then, she was just a kid living in England because her dad served in the U.S. Air Force at RAF Lakenheath. Today, at 49, nearly 40 years later, she’s a teacher in California who has left the red carpets and Hollywood life behind.
Carrie wasn’t dreaming of becoming a Hollywood star, but a casting agent showed up at her elementary school, took a bunch of photos of her, and invited her to a few auditions. In fact, most of her early auditions happened right in her classroom after school. Her brother, who sat in the hallway, was very bored. Then the producers had an idea and asked him to read scenes with her. It worked, and that’s how he ended up playing Newt’s brother in the film.

Eventually, it came down to Carrie and one other girl in the United States. Sigourney Weaver flew in on Concorde. Carrie had recently watched Ghostbusters and was more impressed by that than the gravity of a chemistry test with a Hollywood star. But they clicked instantly, and Carrie even asked for an autograph.
“To be honest with you, I don’t know if I completely understood the process of what was going on and we thought it was a small part in the movie,” she confessed to avpgalaxy.net. “We didn’t realize that it was as big of a part as it was. I mean we were kind of clueless…”
Clueless or not, she became the emotional anchor of Aliens. Newt, the only survivor of the Hadley’s Hope colony on Acheron, forms a strong bond with Ellen Ripley. And in turn, Ripley risks everything to protect her.
Henn turned 9 during filming, and was 10 years old when the film hit cinemas in July 1986. James Cameron insisted she watch Alien before shooting. You’d think that it would be too much for a child, but according to her, she laughed through it. “I didn’t find Alien to be super scary,” she admitted. Years later, at the Aliens premiere in Los Angeles, a Facehugger scene made her jump in fright. That’s when Cameron tapped her shoulder from behind, causing her to scream again. He got her twice. And he loved it.
Despite Aliens becoming one of the most celebrated sci-fi action films ever made, Carrie walked away from Hollywood for good. Her dad was reassigned to America, and she faced culture shock after growing up in England from age two. “I wanted to be a normal child,” she explained in an interview. That meant choosing school over Hollywood.
“That’s what a lot of people have a hard time understanding,” Carrie Henn told Tulsa World in 2016. “They don’t understand that [acting] wasn’t my passion. It wasn’t my dream. Did I enjoy it? Yes. Was it an amazing experience? Absolutely. Would I do it again? Of course.”

But acting wasn’t her career choice. Teaching was. “As a child, I always enjoyed sort of lining up my dolls, especially my Cabbage Patch Kid and teaching to them and I really enjoyed that kind of stuff.”
So, yeah, while Aliens fans still line up at conventions to meet Newt, Carrie Henn heads back to doing what she really loves: teaching in a classroom. The little girl who survived a Xenomorph infestation now shapes young minds for a living.
And Henn seems perfectly happy with that ending.
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