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Home Entertainment Culture

Celebrities who called for ceasefire in Gaza face scrutiny after Trump peace deal breakthrough

October 17, 2025
in Culture, News
Celebrities who called for ceasefire in Gaza face scrutiny after Trump peace deal breakthrough
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Hollywood’s most vocal “Free Palestine” advocates are facing scrutiny for their muted or critical response to the ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas secured by President Donald Trump.

Roughly two years after the deadly Hamas terrorist attacks against Israel sparked a war in Gaza, both sides agreed to the first phase of a peace proposal, Trump announced on Oct. 8. Under the plan, Hamas agreed to release all 20 remaining living hostages held in the Gaza Strip in exchange for Israel freeing about 2,000 Palestinian prisoners, including roughly 250 convicted terrorists.

During an address to Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, Trump hailed the Middle East ceasefire as a “historic day.”

Yet many in Hollywood who repeatedly called for a ceasefire throughout the conflict — including members of campaigns such as Artists4Ceasefire and Film Workers for Palestine — have either stayed quiet or criticized the breakthrough, with few acknowledging Trump’s role in securing it.

Pro-Israel actor and comedian Michael Rapaport was among those who noticed. He called out several celebrities he said were now “silent” about the ceasefire, accusing them of “performance” activism in an Oct. 11 Facebook post.

“CEASEFIRE is NOW, where are these people?” Rapaport wrote, naming actors Mark Ruffalo, John Cusack, Hannah Einbinder, Javier Bardem and singer Lorde. “The war in Gaza is ending. The so-called ‘genocide’ is over. Because it was never about peace. It was about performance,” he added.

Columnist Paula Froelich also criticized about a dozen celebrities who publicly called for a “Free Palestine” and “ceasefire now” or wore a red-hand pin to the Oscars in 2024. She said many have since stayed silent on the peace deal or continued to blame Israel “for all atrocities that have happened in the past two years.”

“If I were less charitable, I might argue that Hollywood celebrities care more about a performative farce — scolding Israel and our president — than seeing a Free Palestine actually happen in real time. How’s that for hypocrisy?” she wrote in her column for the U.K. newspaper The Times.

Some supporters of the “Free Palestine” movement maintain that the ceasefire does not fully address the humanitarian crisis or allegations accusing Israel of genocide.

“Hacks” actress Hannah Einbinder, who made headlines earlier this year for shouting “F— ICE and free Palestine” during her 2025 Emmy Awards acceptance speech, reposted several messages from other accounts questioning whether the ceasefire would hold. One warned there was “no guarantee this genocide will stop” while another criticized the peace terms. 

Other celebrities expressed cautious optimism. Progressive actors Mark Ruffalo and Susan Sarandon shared a statement from Artists4Ceasefire on Oct. 10 calling the agreement “an urgent and heartening moment of relief.” 

The group added, “It brings hope that precious lives can be saved, and that Israel’s bombing and intentional starvation of Palestinian civilians will end, that all hostages are safely returned, and that desperately needed humanitarian aid can flood into Gaza. We hold cautious hope that the ceasefire will last, and will continue to demand it is made permanent.”

Leading up to the deal, more than 1,000 actors, directors and film workers signed a pledge to boycott Israeli film institutions through the activist group Film Workers for Palestine. 

“Inspired by Filmmakers United Against Apartheid, who refused to screen their films in apartheid South Africa, we pledge not to work with Israeli film institutions implicated in genocide and apartheid against the Palestinian people,” the group’s statement said. Signatories reportedly included Ruffalo, Emma Stone, Peter Sarsgaard, Lily Gladstone, Olivia Colman, Sarandon and Tilda Swinton.

The group posted a statement to Instagram on Oct. 15 declaring the boycott against Israel would remain in place “until Palestinians are no longer subjected to occupation, apartheid, and genocide.”

“This catastrophe, this genocide, has not ended with one call for ceasefire. And it will not end so long as the perpetrators of this genocide continue to avoid accountability,” the post added.

Despite the criticism, some actors have publicly praised the peace agreement. 

Israeli-American actress Natalie Portman called it a “momentous day” during an appearance at a film festival in France, saying, “It feels almost crazy to be talking about anything else except celebrating — hopefully — peace.” 

British actress Frances Barber also commended Trump for his role in the deal, writing on X, “I had TDS [Trump Derangement Syndrome], and I’m now eating my words,” while reposting a photo showing a “Thank You” message to Trump written in the sand on a Tel Aviv beach.

Fox News’ Hanna Panreck, Marc Tamasco and Gabriel Hays contributed to this report.

The post Celebrities who called for ceasefire in Gaza face scrutiny after Trump peace deal breakthrough appeared first on Fox News.

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