
Michelle Trachtenberg, ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer' and ‘Harriet the Spy' Star, Dies at 39
Michelle Trachtenberg, a former child star who appeared in the 1996 "Harriet the Spy" hit movie and went on to co-star in two buzzy millennial-era TV shows — "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and "Gossip Girl" — has died. She was 39.
Police responded to a 911 call shortly after 8 a.m. at a 51-story luxury apartment tower in Manhattan's Hell's Kitchen neighborhood where officers found Trachtenberg "unconscious and unresponsive," according to an NYPD statement.
Paramedics pronounced her dead at the scene. No foul play was suspected and the New York Medical Examiner is investigating the cause of death, police said.
"The family requests privacy for their loss," Trachtenberg's representative, Gary Mantoosh, said in a statement Wednesday.
Trachtenberg was 8 when she began playing Nona Mecklenberg on Nickelodeon's "The Adventures of Pete & Pete" from 1994 to 1996 and then starred in the title role in the film adaptations of "Harriet the Spy" and "Inspector Gadget," opposite Matthew Broderick.
"Michelle comes off as genuine because she really is a genuine kid. Everyone can identify with her," said Debby Beece, president of Nickelodeon Movies in 1996.
In 2000 Trachtenberg joined the cast of "Buffy," playing Dawn Summers, the younger sister of the title character played by Sarah Michelle Gellar between 2000 and 2003.
Trachtenberg thanked Gellar for speaking out against Joss Whedon in 2021, following abuse allegations made against the "Buffy" showrunner. "I am brave enough now as a 35-year-old woman to repost this," she wrote on social media, and alluded to "his not appropriate behavior" she experienced as a teenage actor.
In 2001, she received a Daytime Emmy nomination for hosting Discovery's "Truth or Scare." Trachtenberg went on to recurring roles on "Six Feet Under,Weeds" and "Gossip Girl," where she played the gang's scheming nemesis, Georgina Sparks.
For her fan-favorite role, she was nominated as a TV villain at the Teen Choice Award in 2012. "It's definitely a lot more fun than playing the good girl," she told Seventeen in 2009. "I love the reaction you get. I never understood why some actors don't want to play villains or evil characters."
She was one of the original series' stars to return for a pair of guest appearances in the 2021 "Gossip Girl" revival.
Blake Lively on Instagram on Tuesday honored her "Gossip Girl" co-star: "The world lost a deeply sensitive and good person in Michelle. May her work and her huge heart be remembered by those who were lucky enough to experience her fire."
As if to cement herself in millennial culture, Trachtenberg made a cameo in Fall Out Boy's music video for the "This Ain't a Scene, It's an Arms Race" alongside Seth Green.
Hollywood took to social media to mourn one of their own, one who had made the transition from kid star to teen queen to adult actor. "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" co-star David Boreanaz said on Instagram it was "so very sad.. horrible news." Melissa Gilbert, who starred with Trachtenberg in the 1996 film "A Holiday for Love," wrote on Instagram: "My heart aches for your family and all those who loved you so."
Rosie O'Donnell, who starred alongside Trachtenberg in her "Harriet the Spy" debut, said her death was "heartbreaking:I loved her very much. She struggled the last few years. I wish I could have helped." Glee star Chris Colfer remembered her this way: "Michelle was the absolute sweetest and one of the most supportive people I knew," he wrote.
Trachtenberg's later credits included "Ice Princess" in 2005, playing a math prodigy and aspiring figure skater. The AP said it had "a good, though feeble, heart and the best of intentions" and said Trachtenberg was "mining the same nervous twitter from her kid-sister days on 'Buffy the Vampire Slayer.'"
The New York City-born Trachtenberg also appeared in the 2004 teen comedy "EuroTrip," she co-starred with Zac Efron and Leslie Mann in 2009's "17 Again" and played a murderous stalker and abductor on an episode of "Criminal Minds."
For "Killing Kennedy," the 2013 film in which she played the wife of Lee Harvey Oswald, around 80% of Trachtenberg's dialogue was in Russian. She had learned the language from her mother growing up.
Other credits included supporting roles in the films "Mysterious Skin" in 2004 and "Black Christmas" in 2006. She also starred on the NBC medical series "Mercy" (2009–2010) opposite Taylor Schilling. More recently, she hosted the true-crime docuseries "Meet, Marry, Murder" on Tubi.
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Asharq Al-Awsat
08-05-2025
- Asharq Al-Awsat
Pro-Palestinian Demonstrators Clash with Security Guards at Columbia University
Police officers in helmets streamed into Columbia University Wednesday evening to remove a group of mask-clad protesters who staged a Pro-Palestinian demonstration inside the school's main library. Videos shared on social media show a long line of NYPD officers entering the library hours after dozens of protesters pushed their way past campus security officers, raced into the building and then hung Palestinian flags and other banners on bookshelves in an ornate reading room. Some protesters also appear to have scrawled 'Columbia will burn' across framed pictures. Other videos show campus security officers barring another group of protesters from entering the library, with both sides shoving to try and force the other group aside. Police said at least 80 people had been taken into custody, though it wasn't clear how many came from the demonstration inside the library and how many were outside the building. Videos shared by a reporter on the scene show more than 30 people being taken away from the library by officers with their hands tied behind their backs. Protesters and other supporters, meanwhile, gather around the metal barriers set up outside the building by police cheering on the detained demonstrators and chanting 'Free Palestine.' The university's acting president, Claire Shipman, said the protesters who had holed up inside a library reading room were asked repeatedly to show identification and to leave, but they refused. The school then requested the NYPD come in 'to assist in securing the building and the safety of our community,' she said in a statement Wednesday evening. Shipman said two university public safety officers sustained injuries as protesters forced their way into the building. 'These actions are outrageous,' she said, adding that the disruption came as students were studying and preparing for final exams. New York City Mayor Eric Adams, a Democrat, subsequently said officers were entering the campus 'to remove individuals who are trespassing.' New York Gov. Kathy Hochul also denounced the protesters. 'Everyone has the right to peacefully protest,' the Democrat wrote on X. 'But violence, vandalism or destruction of property are completely unacceptable.' US Secretary of State Marco Rubio wrote on X that they are examining visa status for 'trespassers and vandals' who took over the library. 'Pro-Hamas thugs are no longer welcome in our great nation,' he wrote. The Trump administration has cracked down on international students and scholars at several American universities who had participated in pro-Palestinian demonstrations or criticized Israel over its military action in Gaza. Columbia University scholar Mahmoud Khalil, for example, is a legal US resident with no criminal record who was detained in March over his participation in pro-Palestinian demonstrations. Wednesday's demonstration and the effort to break it up came the same evening that the US Justice Department announced it had brought hate-crime charges against a man who had been repeatedly arrested at pro-Palestinian demonstrations over the past year, including one held near Columbia. An indictment charged Tarek Bazrouk, 20, with assaulting Jewish people at the demonstrations. Columbia University in March announced sweeping policy changes related to protests following Trump administration threats to revoke its federal funding. Among them are a ban on students wearing masks to conceal their identities and a rule that those protesting on campus must present their identification when asked. The school also said it had hired new public safety officers empowered to make arrests on campus. Columbia University Apartheid Divest, a pro-Palestinian student group, said it had occupied part of Butler Library because it believed the university profited from 'imperialist violence.' 'Repression breeds resistance — if Columbia escalates repression, the people will continue to escalate disruptions on this campus," the group wrote online. The federal charges against Bazrouk say he kicked a person in the stomach at a protest near the New York Stock Exchange, stole an Israeli flag and punched someone in the face at a demonstration near Columbia, and punched someone wearing an Israeli flag at another Manhattan protest in January. Bazrouk's lawyer, Andrew Dalack, said his attorneys 'look forward to zealously defending' him. A magistrate judge said Wednesday that Bazrouk could be released on bail, but that ruling is being challenged by prosecutors. A hearing is scheduled before a federal judge on Tuesday.


Saudi Gazette
08-05-2025
- Saudi Gazette
Dozens of pro-Palestinian protesters arrested at Columbia University
NEW YORK — Multiple people were taken into custody by the New York Police Department at Columbia University after a pro-Palestinian protest in an area of the main library on campus Wednesday. University officials asked the NYPD for help Wednesday night securing Butler Library 'due to the number of individuals participating in the disruption inside and outside of the building, a large group of people attempting to force their way into Butler Library creating a safety hazard, and what we believe to be the significant presence of individuals not affiliated with the University,' acting university President Claire Shipman said in a statement. Charges are pending against the individuals, the NYPD said. It's unclear how many people have been detained or what charges they may face. The university had earlier said there was a 'disruption' in reading room 301 of Butler Library – about two days before final exams are scheduled to begin at the university. Protesters entered the room around 3:15 p.m. ET, CNN affiliate WABC reported. Two university safety officers were injured during a 'crowd surge' when individuals attempted to enter the library, Shipman said. No details were available on the nature of their injuries. Video from inside the library earlier Wednesday shows public safety officers confronting protesters, who were being blocked and pushed from the library doors as some yell, 'let them out!' 'Stop! You're hurting me!' one protester is heard shouting. New York City Mayor Eric Adams said on X around 7 p.m. ET that 'NYPD is entering the campus to remove individuals who are trespassing.' 'At the direct request of Columbia University, the NYPD responded to an ongoing situation on campus where individuals have occupied a library and are trespassing,' an NYPD spokesperson said in a statement to CNN. 'Multiple individuals who did not comply with verbal warnings by the NYPD to disperse were taken into custody.' Videos from the scene showed officers escorting at least 15 people from the building in zip ties and taking them to an NYPD bus down the block. Officers with crowd control gear, including riot helmets and batons, are seen as the crowd chants 'Free Palestine.' In one video, at least one public safety officer bent an individual over what appears to be a desk, handcuffing them. Another person assisting with the detainment approached the person recording the video, saying 'Back up!' Protesters – who are asking for the university to divest from companies that have ties to Israel – called for the library to be renamed the 'Basel Al-Araj Popular University,' according to a Substack post from Columbia University Apartheid Divest. Al-Araj, a Palestinian activist, was killed in an Israeli raid in 2017. 'The flood shows that as long as Columbia funds and profits from imperialist violence, the people will continue to disrupt Columbia's profits and legitimacy,' the group said. It's unclear whether all the demonstrators at the library Wednesday are affiliated with the group. CNN has reached out to Columbia and the student organization for more information. The demonstration comes about a year after pro-Palestinian protesters at Columbia University initiated a wave of demonstrations at college campuses across the country that culminated in encampments and mass arrests. Protesters in 2024 barricaded inside Hamilton Hall, calling for it to be renamed 'Hind's Hall,' after a 5-year-old girl who was killed by Israeli tank fire while in her family's car in Gaza. It also comes the same day that the House Education and Workforce Committee questioned three university presidents on antisemitism – reminiscent of a similar congressional hearing in April 2024 when former Columbia President Nemat 'Minouche' Shafik testified. Officers repeatedly asked demonstrators to identify themselves and leave the building, though none have agreed to do so, Shipman said. The demonstrators were told they would be in violation of university rules and face possible arrest for trespassing if they didn't disperse, Shipman added. Individuals not involved in the protest were able to exit the library, the university said. 'While this is isolated to one room in the library, it is completely unacceptable that some individuals are choosing to disrupt academic activities as our students are studying and preparing for final exams,' the university said. 'These disruptions of our campus and academic activities will not be tolerated.' The university has stated that those found in violation of university rules and policies 'will face disciplinary consequences' during the ongoing demonstration. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said she has been briefed on the situation and is 'grateful to public safety officials for keeping students safe.' On Wednesday night, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said: 'We are reviewing the visa status of the trespassers and vandals who took over Columbia University's library.' It's unclear whether any of the protesters are international students. CNN has reached out to the State Department for more information. Numerous college campuses – including Columbia – have in recent months been under intense pressure from the Trump administration after it threatened their funding if they don't comply with his policy demands and revoked hundreds of student visas as part of a vast immigration crackdown. In March, the administration said it was canceling $400 million worth of grants and contracts to Columbia University because of what it considers the school's failure to quash antisemitism on campus. The administration demanded several changes, including the university enforce its disciplinary policies, implement rules for protests, ban masks, announce a plan to hold student groups accountable, empower its law enforcement and review its Middle East studies programs. Columbia University in March then announced a series of new policies, including restrictions on demonstrations. Students involved in demonstrations against Israel's war in Gaza were also targeted by the administration. International Columbia University students Mohsen Mahdawi and Mahmoud Khalil, both of whom were involved in last spring's protests, were detained by the administration as it threatened to deport them. Mahdawi was hoping to begin the final step to becoming a US citizen when he was taken away in handcuffs last month. The lawful permanent resident has been an outspoken critic of Israel's military campaign in Gaza and organized Columbia campus protests until March 2024. Mahdawi was recently released on bond. Khalil, a lawful permanent resident who co-founded the Palestinian Student Union at Columbia with Mahdawi, was one of the lead negotiators at last year's pro-Palestinian demonstrations at the university. He faces deportation after being detained in March. University officials in April warned against a repeat of encampments seen on campus last year. 'We want to clearly communicate that camping and encampments on Columbia's campuses are prohibited by University Policy,' the university's public safety department said in a statement. Anyone violating that rule could have their access to areas of campus restricted, Columbia said. And those who refuse to disperse could face 'removal from campus and possible arrest.' About a year after a wave pro-Palestinian demonstrations spread through campuses across the country, the presidents of Haverford College, DePaul and California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo testified on Wednesday about reports of antisemitism on their campuses. Multiple times during the hearing, which turned tense at moments, the president of Haverford College was pressed by Republican members of the committee for specifics on methods of discipline and investigated incidents. It often ended with Wendy Raymond declining to talk about 'individual cases,' frustrating Republican members of the committee, who said the university's federal funding could be jeopardized. 'Respectfully, president of Haverford, many people have sat in this position who are no longer in their positions as presidents of the university because of their failure to answer straightforward questions,' Rep. Elise Stefanik said. — CNN


Al Arabiya
08-05-2025
- Al Arabiya
Pro-Palestinian protestors clash with police officers at Columbia University
Police officers in helmets streamed into Columbia University Wednesday evening to remove a group of mask-clad protesters who staged a Pro-Palestinian demonstration inside the school's main library. Videos shared on social media show a long line of NYPD officers entering the library hours after dozens of protesters pushed their way past campus security officers, raced into the building and then hung Palestinian flags and other banners on bookshelves in an ornate reading room. Some protesters also appear to have scrawled 'Columbia will burn' 1 across framed pictures. Other videos show campus security officers barring another group of protesters from entering the library, with both sides shoving to try and force the other group aside. A police spokesperson late Wednesday said the department wasn't able to provide a number for how many were arrested. Videos shared by a reporter on the scene show more than 30 people being taken away from the library by officers with their hands tied behind their backs. Protesters and other supporters, meanwhile, gather around the metal barriers set up outside the building by police cheering on the detained demonstrators and chanting 'Free Palestine.' The university's acting president, Claire Shipman, said the protesters who had holed up inside a library reading room were asked repeatedly to show identification and to leave, but they refused. The school then requested the NYPD come in 'to assist in securing the building and the safety of our community,' she said in a statement Wednesday evening. Shipman said two university public safety officers sustained injuries as protesters forced their way into the building. 'These actions are outrageous,' she said, adding that the disruption came as students were studying and preparing for final exams. New York City Mayor Eric Adams, a Democrat, subsequently said officers were entering the campus 'to remove individuals who are trespassing.' New York Gov. Kathy Hochul also denounced the protesters. 'Everyone has the right to peacefully protest,' the Democrat wrote on X. 'But violence, vandalism or destruction of property are completely unacceptable.' US Secretary of State Marco Rubio wrote on X that they are examining visa status for 'trespassers and vandals' who took over the library. 'Pro-Hamas thugs are no longer welcome in our great nation,' he wrote. The Trump administration has cracked down on international students and scholars at several American universities who had participated in pro-Palestinian demonstrations or criticized Israel over its military action in Gaza. Columbia University scholar Mahmoud Khalil, for example, is a legal US resident with no criminal record who was detained in March over his participation in pro-Palestinian demonstrations. Wednesday's demonstration and the effort to break it up came the same evening that the US Justice Department announced it had brought hate-crime charges against a man who had been repeatedly arrested at pro-Palestinian demonstrations over the past year, including one held near Columbia. An indictment charged Tarek Bazrouk, 20, with assaulting Jewish people at the demonstrations. Columbia University in March announced sweeping policy changes related to protests following Trump administration threats to revoke its federal funding. Among them are a ban on students wearing masks to conceal their identities and a rule that those protesting on campus must present their identification when asked. The school also said it had hired new public safety officers empowered to make arrests on campus. Columbia University Apartheid Divest, a pro-Palestinian student group, said it had occupied part of Butler Library because it believed the university profited from 'imperialist violence.' 'Repression breeds resistance — if Columbia escalates repression, the people will continue to escalate disruptions on this campus,' the group wrote online. The federal charges against Bazrouk claim he kicked a person in the stomach at a protest near the New York Stock Exchange, stole an Israeli flag and punched someone in the face at a demonstration near Columbia, and punched someone wearing an Israeli flag at another Manhattan protest in January. Bazrouk's lawyer, Andrew Dalack, said his attorneys 'look forward to zealously defending' him. A magistrate judge said Wednesday that Bazrouk could be released on bail, but that ruling is being challenged by prosecutors. A hearing is scheduled before a federal judge on Tuesday.