22 Facts About Rey


She's no Princess Leia—but that's a good thing, as Star Wars' newest strong female lead Rey is feisty, smart, and determined in her own right. Her background remains shrouded in mystery, even with some of the answers we got in The Last Jedi. Needless to say, our interest is piqued in this junk salvager from Jakku. Here are 24 facts about this powerful woman. Some spoilers for The Last Jedi ahead.


Rey Facts

22. Change Of Name

Rey almost wasn’t Rey: previous versions of the character were known as Sally, Rachel, and Kira. Sally and Rachel were likely placeholders, but Kira lasted right up until they began shooting, and was changed after it leaked to the public.

 Shutterstock

21. Breakout Role

Prior to being cast as Rey in The Force Awakens, Daisy Ridley was not really known in Hollywood and had only done small roles on television and film. According to Ridley, she auditioned several times over many months, and had to keep it a secret.

 Getty Images

20. A Jedi of a Different Color

Many fans have speculated that Rey may be what is known as a gray Jedi: someone who can walk between both sides of the force without choosing either side. This concept was originally developed for Star Wars Legends, and these users of the Force don't follow the rules set forth by the Jedi Council.

 Star Wars: The Last Jedi, Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures

19. A Lucky Rescue

BB-8 is saved from a Teedo thanks to Rey, but this wasn't necessarily a heroic at. According to Rey’s diary, she didn’t save the adorable droid to rescue him, she was simply trying to drive home a point to the Teedo: stay off my turf! Little did she know how important this droid was for her future.

 Star Wars: The Force Awakens,Walt Disney Studios

18. Self-Taught

Rey taught herself to fly from a simulator she made from salvaged parts. This explains why she's not half bad at flying the Millennium Falcon in The Force Awakens (and even better in The Last Jedi).

 Star Wars: The Force Awakens,Walt Disney Studios

17. Young Blood

When we first meet her on Jakku in The Force Awakens, Rey is only 19; according to The Force Awakens Visual Dictionaryshe was born 15 years after the events of A New Hope. That's quite young to be pulled into the galaxy's biggest battle!

 Star Wars: The Force Awakens,Walt Disney Studios

16. Blood Relatives?

This age discredits the theory that Kylo Ren and Rey are twins (Han and Leia had twins in the Expanded Universe), as Ren is 29 during The Force Awakens.

 Star Wars: The Force Awakens,Walt Disney Studios

15. Hitting The Gym

Ridley trained for four hours a day, four times a week to prepare for her role as a badass space scavenger. She got to work with a fight choreographer from Game of Thrones and mastered Bojutsu, kickboxing, and climbing. Now we know how Ridley was able to master handling a staff and lightsaber!

 Shutterstock

14. Not Just a Childhood Treasure

In The Force Awakens, we catch a quick glimpse of a doll in the corner of Rey's home. This doll is actually a childhood relic of hers: When she was little, she found a helmet that belonged to Captain Dosmit Raeh, a female Rebel pilot. Rey grew up idolizing Raeh, and ended up making a doll based on her.

 Star Wars: The Force Awakens,Walt Disney Studios

13. Flower Child

Rey collects flowers: as she says in Rey's Survival Guide, "I have a few things at home to help me pass the time. I collect flowers–spinebarrel blooms and nightblossoms–and display them to remind myself that there’s beauty everywhere if you look hard enough, even on Jakku.”

 Star Wars: The Force Awakens,Walt Disney Studios

12. Skywalker Connection

When George Lucas finished working on the second draft of A New Hope, it dawned on him that there were almost no major female characters, and he tried to rewrite Luke Skywalker as a woman. Concept artist Ralph McQuarrie made a sketch for the change, but it obviously never came to life. Nonetheless, Rey's outfit on Jakku was inspired by this sketch, particularly her goggles.

  Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope,Lucasfilm

11. No Toys For You

Young fans were immediately drawn to Rey as soon as she made her film debut. Unfortunately for parents, Hasbro did not feature her in their Star Wars toy line, and focused instead on Kylo Ren and Finn. The few Rey toys had her cloaked and masked, disgusting all of her feminine characteristics. Thankfully, she is featured heavily in The Last Jedi toy line.

 Pexels

10. Multi-lingual

It was never fully explained in The Force Awakens how Rey can speak the same language as wookies and droids. If you happen to read the accompanying material to the movies, Rey's Survival Guide and The Force Awakens: Rey's Story, they state that Rey picked up the languages through salvaged computer tapes.

 Shutterstock

9. Well Liked

Critics went wild for Rey (and Ridley). A journalist at The Wall Street Journal called her “a woman warrior with the stylish ferocity of a kung-fu star,” adding that "It's hard to imagine what the movie—and the sequels to come—might have been if they'd cast the wrong person, but here Daisy Ridley is in all her unassuming glory, and all's right with the galaxy."

 Star Wars: The Force Awakens,Walt Disney Studios

8. Unique Hairstyle

Star Wars’ leading ladies are well known for their hairstyles. First came Queen Amidala, with her elaborate styles, and then Princess Leia's iconic cinnamon buns. Rey's three bun hairstyle in The Last Jedi feels very much like a nod to General Organa.

 Star Wars: The Force Awakens,Walt Disney Studios

7. Award Winner

Who says fictional characters can’t win awards? Rey is actually the first fictional recipient of the Reel Women in Technology Award. (Fictional) Girl power!

 Getty Images

6. First Day Jitters

While on her first press tour, Ridley admitted she was so nervous on the first day of filming that she almost had a panic attack: "I was petrified. I thought I was gonna have a panic attack on the first day. J.J. Abrams .... he probably doesn't remember telling me that my performance was wooden. This was my first day! And I honestly wanted to die. I thought I was gonna cry, I couldn't breathe."

 Getty Images

5. She Can Read Minds

During their brief encounter in The Force Awakens, Rey actually turns the tables on Kylo Ren and reads his mind while he is invading hers. She informs him of his deepest fear: “You’re afraid…that you’ll never be as a powerful as Darth Vader.” Talk about awkward.

 Star Wars: The Force Awakens,Walt Disney Studios

4. First of Her Kind

With The Last Jedi, Rey has become the first lead female Jedi in the film series.

 Star Wars: The Force Awakens,Walt Disney Studios

3. Gear Head

Screenwriter Michael Arndt described the character that would become Rey as a "loner, hothead, gear-head, badass" woman.

 Getty Images

 

2. Green

When casting Ridley as Rey, Abrams was actually attracted to Ridley's inexperience, untested potential and—very important for the secretive Abrams—her lack of exposure as an actress.

 Getty Images

1. The New Luke?

Although Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy has stated that "Rey is the new generation's Luke Skywalker," Rey is her own person, and one Vox journalist has pointed out that "Rey is considerably less callow than Luke." Rey is also characterized by her optimism in the face of hardship, while Luke has become somewhat hardened.

 Star Wars: The Force Awakens,Walt Disney Studios

Sources: 12345