She played 16-year-old Cady Heron in the devilishly good teen comedy Mean Girls.
And ten years on, with the movie enjoying a cult following, Lindsay Lohan, 28, has teased that there may be a sequel in store.
The former child star told Time Out: "People really love the movie: how do you top that? I was with Tina Fey the other day and I said we should do another Mean Girls,"
She continued: "Like an older version where they're all housewives and they're all cheating. That would be really funny. I'll harass Tina to write it."
Saturday Night Live alum Tina, 44, wrote the screenplay and stars alongside Lindsay as calculus teacher Ms. Sharon Norbury.
The 2004 flick centres around a social clique called 'the Plastics' consisting of Rachel McAdams as Regina, Amanda Seyfried as Karen and Lacey Chabert as Gretchen.
Lindsay and 30 Rock star Tina recently met for a special reunion photoshoot for an upcoming issue of Entertainment Weekly.
The ladies snapped a selfie together which Lindsay then shared on her Instagram with the caption: 'Lovely running into an inspiring, funny, beautiful old friend!!!! #tinafey.'
Lindsay has been based in London for the past couple of months preparing for her debut theatre production Speed The Plow, which debuted on Wednesday evening.
The play lifts the lid on the underbelly of Hollywood's entertainment industry and Lilo's character Karen is a secretary to a Hollywood executive who tries to manipulate her way to success.
The show also stars actors Richard Schiff and Nigel Lindsay.
In an interview with The Telegraph, the flame-haired siren admitted she was initially overwhelmed by her role of Karen, who was also portrayed by chart-topper Madonna in 1988, according to the publication.
'You know, when you think about it, I was doing other things before this, and I was travelling, and I come back and I'm looking at this thing and I'm like: "Oh f***." The whole of Act Two, I just speak throughout the whole thing.'
She added: 'It feels really cool. It feels really good. It does. It's... terrifying, at times. Because in the beginning I, like, panicked. I was like: Oh my f***, I can't say all this s***.'
- Daily Mail