Professor Salazar was one of the two Egyptologists who worked at a museum, along with her rival, Professor Hess.
Physical appearance[]
Professor Salazar is a middle-aged woman with long brown hair tied back in a long braid. She also has tanned skin and applies pink-red lipstick. She wears a mauve T-shirt, a purple scarf. beige jeans with large pockets, and green and white sneakers.
Personality[]
According to Velma, Egyptologists like Salazar very aggressively disagree with each other, and Salazar shows this with her debates with Professor Hess. While Hess believes the Egyptian gods are real and that Sobek was a guardian deity, Salazar believes the gods are mere mythology, but Sobek was considered the patron god of thieves. A skeptic, she claimed that those who witnessed Sobek hallucinated the attacks. They constantly argue with each other, with Salazar denouncing Hess for his "empty theories," and they often shout at each other in hieroglyphics.
Despite Salazar's apparent dedication to Egyptology, she desired to escape the cutthroat industry, no longer wanting to engage in such debates. Though she was unwilling to admit it, she believed Hess' theory that there was a gold statue hidden inside the museum's sarcophagus, and turned to crime in an attempt to steal it.
History[]
Be Cool, Scooby-Doo![]
While working at an unnamed museum, Professor Salazar learned there was a gold statue hidden in the sarcophagus, according to the theory of rivalling Egyptologist Professor Hess. She disguised herself as Sobek to shut down the museum's Egyptology exhibit so she could steal the golden statue within the sarcophagus, sell it, and leave the harsh Egyptology industry. She based the disguise on her own theory of Sobek, portraying him as a malevolent and hostile patron god of robbers. She used an alligator head from another exhibit for her disguise. Using the disguise, she removed the statue and hid it in the exhibit, but continued to use the disguise so she could extract it.

Professor Salazar unmasked.
She was first seen arguing with fellow Hess in the Egyptology exhibit, where she argued that Sobek was a myth. She claimed that the two security guards who saw Sobek merely hallucinated the encounter. Later, she argued Hess again in the museum cafeteria, where she denied Hess' theory that there was a gold statue in the sarcophagus. However, when the gang arrived at the museum, they worked with a tour guide, Jeff, and a group of children to investigate the crime and trap Sobek in the sarcophagus. Salazar was unmasked, exposed for her crimes, and handed to authorities, though Hess went to jail with her to continue arguing with her.
Appearances[]
In other languages[]
Actor | Language | Notes |
---|---|---|
Deborah Ciccorelli | Italian |