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Special thanks to Anonymous
Girl for this one.
NFK spies on Michelle
Trachtenberg, Star of `Harriet the Spy' by Julie Bookman - NEWS
FOR KIDS EDITOR, Doug Hamilton
From The Atlantic Journal-Constitution
- March 10th, 1997
Don't you sometimes wish
you could toss away your regular ho-hum life and step into some other
more exciting life? Like maybe the life of a spy . . .
Michelle Trachtenberg says most kids love the idea of being a spy. Michelle,
11, got to pretend to be a spy in a big way when she played Harriet
in last summer's movie "Harriet the Spy," now in video stores.
"A lot of kids are very curious types," Michelle told News
for Kids in a recent phone interview. "We like to ask a lot of
questions and love to find out a lot of cool stuff about the people
around us." Has she ever found out anything unusual about her real
neighbors in Brooklyn, N.Y.?
"Hmmmmmm. There was this time when I got to peek inside at my next-
door neighbor's and there was this fuzzy, bright red carpeting. I thought
that was very interesting, because this neighbor always wears dark colors.
Like a lot of black and stuff."
"Harriet the Spy" is based on Louise Fitzhugh's 1964 book
about sixth-grader Harriet M. Welsch, who yearns to be a writer when
she grows up. Harriet is encouraged to write by her loving nanny, Olle
Golly (played by Rosie O'Donnell in the movie). In the story, Harriet
seems like a spy because she writes down every little thing she observes
in her neighborhood (her "spy route"). But certain somebodies
might not like reading her truth-telling observations ---if they were
to find her notebook, that is. Of course, Harriet's closest friends
get hold of her notebook. And that puts Harriet in the hot seat.
Like Harriet, Michelle is in sixth grade. She also takes some seventh-grade
classes at her junior high in Brooklyn. Her toughest subject?
"I don't think of any subject as tougher," Michelle said.
"I think I always like a subject. I think when kids say they don't
like a subject, they are really saying they don't understand it.
On another subject ---dealing with brothers and sisters ---Michelle
has more advice.
"You should get along," she said, "because in the future
you might need them."
Unlike Harriet Welsch, who's an only child, in the book and movie, Michelle
has one sister, Irene. Although Irene is 18 and already in college,
Michelle said the two remain "very, very close. I really value
my sister. I can always ask her about anything and a lot of her advice
is very useful."
When we spoke with Michelle, she had recently returned home from a trip
to Europe ---mostly England and Germany ---to promote "Harriet."
She's also busy these days meeting with casting directors about more
film and TV opportunities. She appears on the Nickelodeon show "The
Adventures of Pete & Pete," and for the last two years, she
has played an autistic girl named Lily on the soap opera "All My
Children."
BREAKING OUT IN COMMERCIALS
Michelle has been acting steadily since she made a TV commercial when
she was 3 years old. Would you believe that after making almost 100
commercials, she still remembers her first job?
"It was for Wisk detergent," she said. "I played a kid
who spilled cranberry juice on my dad ---not my real dad, the dad in
the commercial -- -on his white shirt. I still remember the motto: `Wisk,
Wisk, Wisk, or tsk, tsk, tsk!'"
More recently she made a Lay's potato chip commercial she made with
Elijah Wood: "I played his little sister, and we got to eat chips
and throw a football around."
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