Conception Writer
Victor Miller was told to watch
John Carpenter's
Halloween (1978) and base a screenplay upon it. Miller was supposed to build Alice upon the characteristics set forth by virginal heroine
Laurie Strode (
Jamie Lee Curtis) in Carpenter's film, particularly a sense of "resourcefulness and intelligence." Miller, however, did not find it necessary for Alice to be virginal and wanted to depict her as a less sympathetic character. Miller's early drafts provide Alice with a backstory, with her having an affair with a married man on the West Coast, which is why her relationship with Steve Christy is deteriorating, and she wants to leave the camp. Miller's most conscious efforts with the character were to write her as an outsider, someone who did not fit in with the rest of the counselors. Once filming began, however, director
Sean S. Cunningham did not explore Alice's story arc in-depth due to budget and time constraints. Miller turned down writing the second film, and Ron Kurtz took on writing duties. Kurtz's script kills Alice off in the opening of the film. Director
Steve Miner found Alice to be pivotal to the plot as she is the heroine of the first film and that she needed to have a dramatic death as "
Part 2 was Jason's film." Due to budgetary constraints again, the film only has Alice stalked and killed by an unseen assailant all in her apartment. King was a friend of a woman who worked in an office alongside Moss. After several other actresses in New York auditioned, they brought King in to audition. When she arrived, there were hundreds of people in the hallway waiting to audition for Alice. King recollects not having to even read for a scene but rather introduce herself and scream. After meeting her, Cunningham remarked, "You sneaky guys! You saved the best one for last!" Cunningham described her as embodying the "vulnerable, girl-next-door type" and having a natural appeal that he wanted for the Alice character. In late August of that year, King received a letter making her casting official. Ron Kurtz brought Alice back for Steve Miner's sequel
Friday the 13th Part 2 (1981), purposefully in a smaller capacity. Both Kurtz and Miner believed King and her agent were trying to push the production for more money. However, in reality, King suffered an aggressive stalker after the first film and wanted to return as long as her character was handled properly. King did not receive a script but recalls having lunch with Miner and his assistant Denise Pinkley, and they asked if she would be willing to return. She agreed as she felt it was something she owed the filmmakers due to the first film's success. Alice's scenes for
Part 2 were shot over a weekend in Connecticut at the end of November 1980. Miner recalls having fun shooting Alice's sequences, being particular about King's movement as the character. Conversely, King described returning as Alice for this film to be unenjoyable due to a mundane set, "It was just me, a head in the refrigerator and someone outside, ready to throw a black cat at me through the window." Filming Alice's death with the ice pick, King was injured when the prop failed to retract.
Characterization Film critic Terry Lawson describes the character's depiction in
Friday the 13th (1980) as an "
all-American" girl, attributing to her being "
destined to be the last one alive." Ted Serrill (
Home News Tribune) describes Alice's placement as the heroine feeling arbitrary. Mike Hughes (
The Journal News) wrote that Adrienne King "projects a combination of intelligence and fragility," in Alice. Both Hughes and Ron Cowan (
Statesman Journal) criticize the character's trait of knocking the villain unconscious and running away without killing her, the latter describing Alice as "a rather panicky young woman." Alice's creator, writer Victor Miller, acknowledges this characteristic of the character in an
op-ed, writing, "Without spoiling the ending for you, I'll say that our heroine becomes locked in a terminal struggle with the villain. Time and time again the heroine cannot bring herself to kill the villain." King states that she based her portrayal on traditional horror movie characters and described Alice as a "great
scream queen heroine." She also expresses regret that, due to the nature of horror movies, audiences never got to see Alice's relationship with Steve fleshed out, or what could have happened between her and fellow counselor, Bill (
Harry Crosby). King attests that the script didn't provide her with a lot of material to work with in preparing for Alice. King, an artist in real life, incorporated this aspect of herself into Alice and often spent her time sketching on set.
Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter (1984) director
Joseph Zito praised the natural performance of King, "...the way Adrienne King played the lead—you really felt for her and cared for her." Alice has garnered her comparisons to other
genre heroines such as Laurie Strode,
Ellen Ripley (
Sigourney Weaver),
Nancy Thompson (
Heather Langenkamp), and
Sidney Prescott (
Neve Campbell). Writer Jessica Robinson attributes Alice's survival to her innocence and resourcefulness. Bruce F. Kawin writes that, unlike other heroines of the time, Alice isn't saved by a man in the ending, thus having a more profound impact on future slasher films. Alice is one of the original examples of the "final girl" theory by
Carol J. Clover in her non-fiction book
Men, Women, and Chainsaws (1992). == In popular culture ==