The little girl who burned Bibles became a Hollywood legend

She spent her earliest years inside a controversial religious sect — a world where “free love” was celebrated, obedience was demanded, and the children were told to prepare for the second coming.

For a while, it seemed almost peaceful… until it wasn’t.

Anything but ordinary

She was once one of Hollywood’s biggest stars — a breakout actress who shot to fame in one of the most iconic horror films ever made and worked with some of the industry’s most celebrated directors.

But that life… is long gone.

In 2020, she walked away from the spotlight, left the United States, and built a quiet, stripped-down life in Mexico. And she hasn’t looked back once.

Her childhood was anything but ordinary. She was born in 1973 in Florence, Italy, to an Irish-born artist father, and an American-born writer mother, Terri.

Her father ran an Italian chapter of the Children of God and while most kids were learning to ride bikes or going to school, the future star was living in communal compounds. She traveled across Europe with her parents, and watched adults around her embrace a lifestyle she never felt connected to.

Children of God, a religious sect / Getty Images

Even as a young girl, she sensed something was wrong.

She believed in God, yes — but not in the group’s strict roles for women or their “hippie aesthetic,” as she would later call it.

“I remember watching how the [cult’s] men were with the women, and at a very early age I decided I did not want to be like those women. They were basically there to serve the men sexually — you were allowed to have more than one wife,” she told People

Burning Bibles

She refused to dress like the other girls and rebelled at expectations that females existed to serve the men. She didn’t fit their mold, and she knew it. As a young girl, she pushed back by setting a wall of Bibles on fire and defiantly answering “no” whenever anyone asked if she had “let God into her heart.”

She often joked that while everyone in the sect embraced natural, earthy looks, “I came out of the womb waving red lipstick.”

Then things took a darker turn.

When whispers within the sect shifted toward child–adult sexual relations, her father grew terrified that his daughter would be targeted. He made a desperate decision: he gathered his children, fled Italy, and left the group behind forever.

Assimilating into American life after escaping a cult was anything but smooth.

”We thought everyone was boring,” she would later recall.

She spent her teenage years on the streets of Portland, Oregon, a runaway finding refuge among the city’s drag queens. They became an unlikely but protective chosen family.

When her parents split, she bounced to Seattle to live with her father, juggling classes at Roosevelt High and Nova Alternative High while flipping burgers at McDonald’s to survive. She had trained in ballet until age 13, but by 15, she made a decision most adults couldn’t fathom: she legally emancipated herself and cut ties with her parents entirely.

Years later, she even returned to that small Italian town — this time with her then-boyfriend, shock rocker Marilyn Manson — and the locals were stunned to see the girl who once lived quietly among them come back transformed.

Breakthrough role in 1996

After a handful of small acting gigs in the early ’90s, her big break finally arrived. Casting directors for the 1996 cult slasher Scream were searching for someone who could embody a rare mix of attitude and vulnerability — someone “spunky,” “cynical,” yet still unmistakably “innocent.”

They found exactly what they were looking for, and the role of Tatum Riley became her first real launchpad into Hollywood superstardom.

Suddenly, the little girl who had grown up in a cult had become a major Hollywood star. Her name? Rose McGowan.

Director Wes Craven and Rose McGowan who stars in his new film Scream, at the party after the film’s premiere WEd. night. Photo Iris Schneider / Getty Images

What followed Scream was a rapid climb straight into the Hollywood fast lane. She soon found herself front and center in a string of buzzy late-’90s films — Going All the Way, Devil in the Flesh, and the cult favorite Jawbreaker.

Each role pushed her further into the spotlight, shaping her image as one of the era’s most magnetic, unpredictable screen presences.

Working with Tarantino

Then came the 2000s… and everything changed.

She became a household name thanks to her unforgettable role as Paige Matthews in the hit supernatural series Charmed (2001–2006), captivating millions of viewers every week. Hollywood wanted more, and she delivered.

She stole scenes in the surreal fantasy Monkeybone (2001) and later exploded back onto the big screen in Grindhouse (2007), the double-feature collaboration between Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino.

Shutterstock

Her performance was so striking, so unapologetically bold, that it earned her nominations for both a Saturn Award for Best Actress and a Scream Award, cementing her status as one of the most daring actresses of her time.

At the same time, struggles were brewing behind the scenes that few knew about. In the early 1990s, McGowan developed an eating disorder in a desperate attempt to shrink her weight to 84 pounds (38 kg), trying to match the models in magazines.

Battling eating disorder

“I never was able to get below 92 pounds (42 kg),” she later wrote. “I felt like a failure.”

Her battle with the eating disorder came to an end in early 1993 when she met Brett Cantor, co-owner of Hollywood’s Dragonfly nightclub. Tragically, Cantor was fatally stabbed in his home that July, and she later said his death left her “shattered.” The case remains unsolved to this day.

In 1997, she began a romantic relationship with rock musician Marilyn Manson. She described him as “one of the sweetest people you could ever meet” and said their relationship offered her a break from the pressures of responsibility.

“I ran away with the circus. That’s what I needed for 3½ years. I just needed to not be responsible — to have fun. Then, eventually, I kind of grew up,” she reflected. The couple got engaged in February 1999 but ultimately split in 2001.

MeeToo movement: ”I was the first”

Beyond her acting, Rose McGowan is known for one thing that shook the world

In October 2017, Rose McGowan went public with a shocking allegation: she accused former Miramax boss Harvey Weinstein of rape. Her brave move sparked a movement, shining a light on the widespread sexual abuse in Hollywood.

“I’ve been called one of the first to speak out. No. I was the first. called the New York Times. I blew it wide open, not them. They won the Pulitzer and I’m the one hard-up for money. It’s disgusting. I was kind of grossed out by how much they enjoyed being lauded,” she told The Guardian.

Wikipedia Commons / Miguel Discart

The Scream star said Weinstein assaulted her back in 1997 at the Sundance Film Festival and claimed she had even spoken out to her Phantoms co-star Ben Affleck, accusing him of being part of the cover-up. She also revealed that during her time on Charmed, she faced a toxic work environment on set.

Once her story came out, it quickly snowballed. More women in the entertainment industry stepped forward, sharing similar experiences. In total, over 80 women accused Weinstein of sexual misconduct.

The movement grew even bigger as survivors encouraged others to share their stories online using the hashtag #MeToo, bringing the staggering scale of the issue into the public eye and sparking conversations across society.

In December 2021, a federal judge dismissed the racketeering lawsuit Rose McGowan had filed back in October 2019 against Harvey Weinstein.

Living in Mexico

As of now, McGowan has moved from New York to Mexico, becoming a permanent resident and making her home in Tulum, Quintana Roo. She has said she doesn’t plan on returning to the United States.

“My father lived in Mexico for 35 years and mi gusta Mexico. Te quiero much, mi amores. It is an incredible country. It is so wildly geographically diverse, culturally diverse and just very, very special. There’s so much joy,” she shared during a Charmed panel at 90s Con 2025.

In another interview, the actress revealed that she never felt at ease with the fame that came with acting:

“I found being reacted to for something that wasn’t me deeply embarrassing,” she says. “It didn’t give me a rush. It was the opposite for me, and I looked at it like, this is my day job, it’s just extraordinarily strange.”

Rose McGowan has also revealed that a provocative 2007 photo shoot with Rosario Dawson was the turning point when she grew fed up with being treated as a sex symbol.

“I was on the cover of Rolling Stone with a fake tan and gun belt around me and breasts,” she told art publication Flatt.

“I just was like, ‘I’ve had it. I’m like sick of being sexualized.’”

She admitted that the experience made her step back from Hollywood: she “checked out” and realized, “I wasn’t meant to be an actress.”

Rose is a remarkable, articulate, and passionate woman. Thank you for everything you’ve done to speak out, inspire, and make a difference — your courage and voice have touched the world.

READ MORE