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		<title>Michelle Trachtenberg: On the Fast Track</title>
		<link>http://www.hmonthly.com/2009/04/20/michelletrachtenberg-fast-track/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Apr 2009 07:35:55 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.hmonthly.com/blog/?p=3532</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[words by Jason Dean There are few sure things in the entertainment business, but here is one truth you can bank on: Audiences love the young, precocious screen star. In recent years, Hollywood has enthusiastically fed the public’s addiction, churning out cuddly, pint-sized stars with the prolific pace of a puppy mill. But the glare [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_3558" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 325px"><a rel="attachment wp-att-3558" href="http://www.hmonthly.com/blog/2009/04/20/michelletrachtenberg-fast-track/hcover/"><img class="size-full wp-image-3558" title="Michelle Trachtenberg" src="http://hmonthly.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/hcover.jpg" alt="hcover Michelle Trachtenberg: On the Fast Track" width="315" height="403" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Michelle Trachtenberg photo by Robert Todd Williamson. To see the full layout of Michelle buy your copy today.</p></div>
<p>words by Jason Dean</p>
<p>There are few sure things in the entertainment business, but here is one truth you can bank on: Audiences love the young, precocious screen star. In recent years, Hollywood has enthusiastically fed the public’s addiction, churning out cuddly, pint-sized stars with the prolific pace of a puppy mill.</p>
<p>But the glare of the spotlight and the pressure of growing up too fast can do strange things to a kid’s equilibrium. Just ask McCauley Culkin and Haley Joel Osment. Or Tatum O’Neal and Drew Barrymore. Or any former child star named Corey. In that sense, most child actors are like kittens and puppies. You wish you could give them a shot (and I don’t mean Botox or Restylane) that would keep them young and adorable and thus prevent them from growing into full-sized, colossal fuck-ups that dig up flower beds, destroy furniture and crash their Mercedes while snorting coke off the steering wheel. </p>
<p>Michelle Trachtenberg is a notable exception to this overplayed scenario. The early bloomer’s career has maintained an upward trajectory with nary a hiccup of indiscretion. A shill for Wisk laundry detergent as a tot, Trachtenberg landed a role on the daytime soap <em>All My Children</em> at the tender age of 6. She notched her first leading film role at 10 as the title character in <em>Harriet the Spy,</em> based on the popular book series. Her high school years were spent as Sarah Michelle Gellar’s kid sister on the WB series <em>Buffy the</em> <em>Vampire Slayer</em>. Today, the 23-year-old has blossomed into a full-fledged sex symbol. But if you pop your eyes back into their sockets, you will find a dedicated actress who has nurtured her craft and aspires to continue growing professionally. It’s no accident that she’s a survivor. </p>
<p>“It hasn’t been one-hundred percent smooth,” she says, “but it hasn’t been rocky, either. It’s been a challenge, because I’ve always had to prove myself.” Granted, Trachtenberg is not the first to negotiate the transition to cinematic adulthood with aplomb: Jodie Foster is a fine example of such crossover success. Even the impish Drew Barrymore put her well-documented missteps behind her to become a true box-office force. But under the intense scrutiny of scandal-hungry tabloids and online rumor mongers, the fact that Trachtenberg has stayed above the fray is particularly commendable. </p>
<p> In New York while shooting the new season of CW’s <em>Gossip Girl</em>, Trachtenberg recently took some time to talk about her new film with Zac Efron, <em>17 Again</em>, which opens April 17. Between shooting the pilot for <em>Mercy</em>, a hospital drama for NBC, and returning to <em>Gossip Girl</em> along with fulfilling press obligations for <em>17 Again</em>, Trachtenberg’s time is in demand. Realizing this, I decide to limit my line of questioning to legitimate topics, resisting the urge to find out who she thinks is hotter: Efron or Chace Crawford. When you’re a young starlet, those are the pressing issues you regularly get quizzed on, Trachtenberg informs me, just a hint of annoyance in her voice. </p>
<p>In <em>17 Again</em>, Mike O’Donnell (Matthew Perry), visits his old high school and reminisces in front of an old trophy case as he laments past decisions that he believes turned his once promising life into its current sucky condition. His marriage has fallen apart, he’s lost his job, and his teenage kids think he’s a loser. Luckily, the school janitor happens by and – thanks to some mischievously inexplicable janitor voodoo – 37-year-old Mike is soon transformed into 17-year-old Mike (Efron). Along with the chance to alter the course of fate, Mike’s return to his youthful appearance gives him a peer’s eye view into the lives of his kids, who are now his fellow classmates, not to mention the flirtatious attention of his wife (Leslie Mann), who can’t get over how much he resembles her ex. Trachtenberg, as Maggie O’Donnell, gets the surreal experience of having both Perry and Efron as her onscreen dads. The actress, who has joked that she might wear a “Zac Efron is my daddy” T-shirt to the movie’s premiere, likes the fact that her character is opinionated, confident, and smart – a role model for the cool, modern teenage girl.</p>
<p>“One of my favorite literary terms is <em>‘the willing suspension of disbelief’</em>,” she says, referring to what attracted her to the fantasy premise of the film. “The mystical imagination of the writer—that’s very appealing to me.” Now for the obvious question: Would she make the trip back to year 17 of her own life if she had the chance? “There’s no way I’m going back to high school,” she immediately responds. “Kids are cruel.” Taking a moment to consider the question, she adds, “Maybe for a week, knowing what I know now.” For instance? “Knowing that I wouldn’t be flat-chested all my life or that all the boys that made fun of me would be dying to ask me out now, so maybe that might be fun.” </p>
<p> So there’s nothing in her past the young actress would like to erase or fix? “I’m a believer that everything happens for a reason and even the hardships that you face in life are meant to form you as a person and as a character in your own right,” she says. “Maybe there’s a few guys that I wish I hadn’t dated, but they shall remain nameless.” </p>
<p> Trachtenberg’s focus on her craft was never clouded by youthful experimentation with drugs or alcohol. She’s proud of the fact that she never became just another cautionary tale about the pitfalls of teen celebrity success. In fact, she was a youth representative when President Clinton launched the Coalition for a Drug-Free America program. “I’ve never done a drug in my life. That’s a hundred-million percent true,” she says. “I enjoy what I do, and I wouldn’t ever sacrifice that for anything.” If there’s a minor down side to such clean living, it’s the scenes in which Trachtenberg has had to snort coke or smoke weed. Suffice it to say her technique was not one-take caliber in either case.</p>
<p>Trachtenberg’s strong work ethic was apparent early on. “Maybe I was a weird kid, but I knew I had a lot of hard work ahead of me if this was what I wanted to do for the rest of my life.” She learned a lot by observing how others conducted themselves on the set. “I have zero tolerance for unprofessionalism,” she says. “It’s my job to get to work on time, learn all my lines, and bring my A-game. It was really fascinating throughout my career at different ages to find people who don’t do that. To me, that’s completely unfathomable.” She elaborates on the point. “If you have a reputation of not coming out of your trailer for hours because you don’t like your shoes or you come on the set and you’re so exhausted from partying the night before, people remember these things. Producers talk.”</p>
<p>Trachtenberg credits her mom with instilling balance in her promising career very early on. During <em>Harriet the Spy</em>, she was on the set every day and accompanied Michelle for the film’s European press junket, making sure some time was allotted for museum trips and other cultural enrichment. Born in Russia, she worked as a puppeteer before leaving for New York, where Michelle and her sister were born. “She molded me into the person I am today. She’s an extraordinary woman – she’s been a nurse and a financial analyst and she’s still very involved in my business stuff.”</p>
<p>When she turned 18, Trachtenberg made a conscious decision to tackle edgier roles. She lit up the screen in the college-age road comedy <em>Eurotrip</em>. She also made her first trip to Sundance, thanks to her role in the indie film <em>Mysterious Skin</em>, in which two young men cope with repressed memories of being sexually abused by their baseball coach. “I’m very proud of that film,” she says. “I was this girl who had done glitzy, PG-themed stuff and here’s Gregg Araki, director of <em>Doom Generation</em>, and we sat down and had a cup of coffee and I said, ‘You’re probably not gonna hire me but this is what I got, this is what I feel. If you’re willing to take the chance, I’m willing to go there with you.’ It was the most exhilarating experience<br />
I’ve had as an actress.”</p>
<p>In 2005, Trachtenberg returned to family-oriented fare, starring in <em>Ice Princess</em>, even though she had no ice skating experience prior to getting the part. She trained for almost nine months, and although stunt doubles did the jumps and more intricate moves, all the footwork was hers. “That was probably one of the most physically challenging experiences of my life,” she recalls. “I give much respect to any athlete for the amount of discipline they need to have to perfect their craft.” Trachtenberg admires actresses who continually explore their range rather than becoming complacent with playing a particular type of role. “Charlize Theron is a great example, as well as Julianne Moore and Nicole Kidman,” she points out. “Look at Halle Berry and how hard she fought for her <em>Monster’s Ball</em> role. She had to prove herself and she was already a full-fledged and incredibly successful actress.” </p>
<p>Earlier this year, Trachtenberg returned to Sundance for <em>Against the Current</em>, which also starred Joseph Fiennes, Justin Kirk, and Mary Tyler Moore. “When you do a studio movie it’s one for ‘them’,” she explains. “When you do a really awesome indie movie, it’s one for you.” Doing press at Sundance is refreshing, she says, because she doesn’t get grilled with “silly, gossipy questions” about her personal life. On that subject, Trachtenberg has to deal with more than her fair share of trash journalism and the predatory paparazzi. “I’m not gonna lie, it gets a little depressing,” she admits. “When I’m pulling up to a party and there’s thirty dudes surrounding my car and shoving lenses in my windshield—when they’re purposely trying to shoot under your skirt to get a panty shot—it’s insane. How do these people live with themselves?” Thus, she has learned to keep certain details of her life private. “I don’t have public relationships,” she says. “I did that once years ago when I didn’t know any better. So much of my life is ‘Google-able’ it’s nice to have one thing that’s not.” </p>
<p>Returning to her deviously delicious role as Georgina Sparks in <em>Gossip Girl</em> has been a kick for Trachtenberg. At the end of Season 1, Georgina was hauled off to a boot camp for troubled girls only to resurface in Season 2, which begins airing this fall. “I gotta say, I love being a bitch. I have great words written for me and it’s super fun to be that manipulative and evil on set and then go home and everything’s A-OK.” Trachtenberg has another movie, <em>Young Americans</em> with Topher Grace and Anna Faris, scheduled for release this fall. Then, there’s <em>Mercy</em>, the NBC pilot in which she plays one of a central trio of nurses.</p>
<p>In Hollywood, it’s become <em>de rigueur</em> to never get an adult to do a child’s job. Long gone are the days of <em>Grease</em>, when Stockard Channing, (34) Olivia Newton-John, (29) and John Travolta (a comparatively callow 24), called on audiences’ willing suspension of disbelief as they passed themselves off as a high schoolers. Not to mention Jeff Conaway, who looks to be about 105 these days. In contrast, refer to Efron’s highly successful franchise, <em>High</em> <em>School Musical</em>. Average age of the main cast: just over 18 years old. Which again points to contemporary Hollywood’s insatiable appetite for bankable young stars. In Trachtenberg’s case, even as she takes on more young adult roles, the fact remains that she still looks youthful enough to play high school, as evidenced by her role in <em>17 Again</em>. “I used to think the second I turn 18, I’ll be an adult and everyone’s gonna treat me as an adult.” That may be true, but just to clarify, youth is skin deep; maturity comes from within. And Trachtenberg has proven time and again that she has the depth to hang with the grown-ups.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>styled by Annabel Tollman,  hair by Thomas Dunkin,   makeup by Fabiola</p>



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		<title>The Unconventional Madchen Amick</title>
		<link>http://www.hmonthly.com/2008/11/08/the-unconventional-madchen-amick/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 08 Nov 2008 10:29:29 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[  photos by Robert Todd Williamson Mädchen Amick gets bored easily and she has no problem admitting it. So it has to be a good thing that the actress was recently juggling not one, not two, but three series. A series regular on My Own Worst Enemy, Amick has also just wrapped stints on both [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> </p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://hmonthly.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/fash_madchenonfloor.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-300" title="fash_madchenonfloor" src="http://hmonthly.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/fash_madchenonfloor.jpg" alt="fash madchenonfloor The Unconventional Madchen Amick" width="540" height="405" /></a></p>
<p><span>photos by Robert Todd Williamson</span></p>
<p>Mädchen Amick gets bored easily and she has no problem admitting it. So it has to be a good thing that the actress was recently juggling not one, not two, but <em>three</em> series. A series regular on <em>My Own Worst</em> <em>Enemy</em>, Amick has also just wrapped stints on both <em>Gossip Girl</em> and <em>Californication</em>. Let’s also throw in for good measure that these shows are shot on opposite coasts. “Literally, when I was shooting <em>Gossip Girl </em>I was shooting <em>Californication </em>at the same time. <em>My Own Worst Enemy</em> is primarily based in New York too. Sometimes I would shoot a scene for <em>Californication</em> in the morning, hop on a plane, and shoot a scene in New York for <em>Gossip Girl</em> that same night. It was insane.” Amick has always gone the unconventional route; how could she not when her first big television series was none other than the cult fave <em>Twin Peaks</em>?</p>
<p><span><strong><em>h:</em></strong> What’s the big difference for you in working on something like <em>Californication </em>vs. <em>My Own Worst</em> <em>Enemy</em>? </span></p>
<p><span><strong><em>Mädchen Amick:</em></strong> I absolutely loved working on <em>Californication</em>. The writing and the dialogue is just unbelievable. They really focus on the characters themselves. In the Christian [Slater] show, I’m the wife – I have the home life and not the action side. Of course, the show itself has a large cinematic side to it with the action side of it. It’s so exciting for me, because I’m constantly looking to be challenged – I always get really bored in the middle of doing something. (laughs) If I’m doing a comedy I’m dying to do a drama, and the other way around. But it’s a steady job and I know where I’m going to be for the next few months, which is great. </span></p>
<p><span><strong><em>h:</em></strong> On <em>Gossip Girl</em> you played the married ‘older’ woman Catherine for the first few episodes of Season 2 and had a lot of opportunities to roll around with that hottie Chace Crawford. </span></p>
<p><span><strong><em>MA:</em></strong> It’s funny, when you look at my character (on that show), she’s married to an older man, and she’s a duchess as well &#8211; very rich. And she’s having an affair with a high school student. She really mixes it up, that duchess. </span></p>
<p><a href="http://hmonthly.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/picture1418.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-314" title="picture1418" src="http://hmonthly.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/picture1418.jpg" alt="picture1418 The Unconventional Madchen Amick" width="557" height="720" /></a></p>
<p> </p>
<p><span><strong><em>h:</em></strong> What’s your story on <em>Californication</em>? </span></p>
<p><span><strong><em>MA:</em></strong> My storyline is Hank Moody (David Duchovny) is writing a biography on a famous rock producer/musician, and he wants to get the real story of what makes this guy tick; what’s the story behind the façade. The character has this long lost love – which would be me. And so Hank basically starts stalking me (laughs) and then he and I develop a sort of a relationship that becomes a love triangle – or a four corner love triangle – between me, Hank, Karen (Natascha McElhone) and the rock producer. Everybody is so talented on that show, it’s a great thing to be a part of. </span></p>
<p><a href="http://hmonthly.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/picture1443.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-317" title="picture1443" src="http://hmonthly.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/picture1443.jpg" alt="picture1443 The Unconventional Madchen Amick" width="540" height="720" /></a></p>
<p><span><br />
</span></p>
<p><span><strong><em>h:</em></strong> Let’s talk about the other guy in your filmic life right now – Christian Slater. You’re the housewife to his split personality action character. Is she going to cross over too? </span></p>
<p><span><strong><em>MA:</em></strong> The great thing about <em>My Own Worst Enemy</em> is it creates an environment where you don’t know who’s on what side, who’s working for the government – so the possibilities are endless. As far as I know now, I’m just a housewife in a loving relationship, but I can only imagine she’s going to figure something out. </span></p>
<p><span><strong><em>h:</em></strong> I love the fact in the first episode you discover that his office pal is <em>Mr. Undercover</em> himself.   </span></p>
<p><span><strong><em>MA:</em></strong>  On this show, you never know who’s real, who’s got an agenda, and who’s going to do a 180. It could end up being me. It’s got elements of <em>Bourne Identity </em>and James Bond – if you enjoy those types of films, you won’t be bored with this one. It’s like <em>Twin Peaks</em> – which was weird and quirky and had this whole cult following that literally changed the face of television. So when people say ‘Will Mr. and Mrs. Middle America understand this?’ (<em>My Own Worst Enemy)</em> I think we underestimate the American audience sometimes, and I think they can appreciate something that is intelligently done, or they just turn the channel. </span></p>
<p><span><strong><em>h:</em></strong> Especially Joe Six-Pack.</span></p>
<p><span><strong><em>MA:</em></strong>  (Laughs) <em>Especially</em> him.</span></p>
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<p> </p>
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