Aileen Quinn established her claim to fame at an early age with her iconic performance in the title role of Annie.
Quinn was just nine years old when she beat out 8,000 other young girls to be cast as the flame-haired orphan in the 1982 theatrical feature, which was one of the final films from the influential filmmaker John Huston.
Quinn proved herself to be a star even as a child, and Annie went on to be nominated for two Academy Awards and two golden Globes.
The role catapulted Quinn to stardom on the stage, where she could show off her singing and acting chops.
Since her heyday as a performer in the 1980s and ’90s, the actress has stayed busy with roles on television and in independent films, and she has also ventured into academia as a theatre professor.
And now, the Daily Mail has obtained photos of Quinn from an extremely rare sighting in Los Angeles. See what the stage and screen star looks like at 54.
Aileen Quinn established her claim to fame at an early age with her iconic performance in the title role of Annie (pictured). Quinn was just nine years old when she beat out 8,000 other young girls to be cast as the flame-haired orphan in the 1982 theatrical feature
Quinn proved herself to be a star even as a child, and Annie went on to be nominated for two Academy Awards and two golden Globes (pictured in Annie). See her now at 54 in new photos obtained by the Daily Mail
Even decades later, Quinn still sports the eye-catching flame-red hair that helped make her a star.
Instead of the short, curly look she’s most identified with from Annie, Quinn now favors a longer straight style with chic blunt bangs and a deeper shade of red.
Quinn is technically a brunette who wore a wig of human hair for Annie, but she has continued to maintain her iconic red locks since shooting to fame with the musical.
The actress was was seen stepping out of her car, and she had her hands full with a black bag and a sparkling purple cane, as well as another black backpack at her feet.
She was unmissable in a red-and-black floral patterned minidress with a plunging neckline.
She layered her ensemble with a sleek black denim jacket, and she completed the the vibrant look with open-toe heels with sparkling silver and black straps.
Quinn was born in 1971 in Yardley, Pennsylvania, and she got her start in dance lessons when she was just four.
She grew up in Far Hills, New Jersey, which she participated in community theater projects.
Quinn from an extremely rare sighting in Los Angeles earlier this month
Even decades later, Quinn still sports the eye-catching flame-red hair that helped make her a star. Instead of the short, curly look she’s most identified with from Annie, Quinn now favors a longer straight style with chic blunt bangs and a deeper shade of red
Quinn is technically a brunette who wore a wig of human hair for Annie, but she has continued to maintain her iconic red locks since shooting to fame with the musical
Following her star-making turn in Annie, Quinn would go on to receive two Golden Globe nominations, one for new star of the year and the other for the traditional best actress in a musical or comedy award.
She was nominated alongside her costar Carol Burnett, though neither actress won that year. Although Annie is now considered a classic, its 1982 release was met with mixed reviews from critics, and the film reportedly failed to make a profit in its initial theatrical run due to its high budget.
The Golden Raspberry Awards, which are given to the worst films of the year, nominated Annie for worst picture, director and screenplay, along with two nominations for Quinn: worst new star, which she lost, and worst supporting actress, which she won.
Despite the rocky reception at the time, Annie has since gone on to be more favorably viewed, especially as many of the songs featured in the film — which was based on the 1977 stage musical of the same name — have had an enduring popularity.
In 2022, Quinn was a guest at the TCM Classic Film Festival in Hollywood for a 40th-anniversary screening of Annie, which featured a conversation with the star after the film.
While speaking to Fox News ahead of the festival, the actress recalled how it felt ‘like a real family’ on set, with her older costars filling in as her ‘aunts and uncles.’
‘John Huston was like a grandfather,’ she said of the Maltese Falcon filmmaker, who died in 1987 at 81. ‘He would always call me “Aileen darling.” I was never just Aileen to him. It was always “Aileen darling.” It was like my last name.
‘But it was such a family-oriented, happy set. Everyone, from the cast and crew, just made me smile,’ she reminisced. ‘They still do.’
She was unmissable in a red-and-black floral patterned minidress with a plunging neckline, along with a black denim jacket and open-toe heels. She was seen with her hands full as she had a black bag and a sparkling purple cane
After rocketing to fame with Annie, Quinn became a popular stage performer in traveling musical productions. She also appeared in multiple films in the 1980s, and she has continued to appear on the big and small screens sporadically in recent years
Although Annie received mixed reviews at the time of its release, it is now considered a classic. In 2022, she was interviewed after a 40th-anniversary screening at the TCM Classic Films Festival in Hollywood; pictured with TCM hosts Alicia Malone and Mark Wynns
In a 2022 interview with Fox News, Quinn admitted that she didn’t realize how important her costars Carol Burnett and Albert Finney were, nor how influential director John Huston was; pictured in 2023 in LA at Carol Burnett: 90 Years of Laughter + Love
The singer’s performances on the Annie soundtrack have endured, and It’s The Hard Knock Life had a second life when Jay-Z sampled it in 1998 for Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem); pictured in Annie
She also joked about knowing her costar Burnett from a commercial she had seen before filming, rather than from The Carol Burnett Show.
‘We still laugh about that to this day. I had no idea who I was working with, including John Huston,’ Quinn admitted.
Quinn revealed that the excruciating audition process for the film, in which she competed against thousands of other girls, required ‘eight separate auditions for almost a year.’
She compared that to musical theater, which might have just ‘three callbacks at most.’
Quinn said her last two auditions both flew her out to Hollywood, first with nine finalists, then just three competitors after screen tests with her future costar Albert Finney, who died in 2019 at 82.
After her Annie success, Quinn ventured into the recording industry with her 1982 debut album, Bobby’s Girl, and she returned decades later with two more LPs in 2015 and 2019.
Her performances from Annie had already been featured earlier that year on the soundtrack from Annie, which was a top-40 hit, and was later certified platinum for sales over 1,000,000 units by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).
In particularly, Quinn’s performance on It’s The Hard Knock Life has had enormous staying power thanks to its enduring popularity and a blockbuster sample used in Jay-Z’s Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem) from 1998.
Quinn has continued to perform with her band, and one of her most recent high-profile roles was a guest spot in 2020 on the revived Will & Grace.
Read the full article here


