Back in late 2003, actor Billy Crudup left his then heavily pregnant girlfriend Mary-Louise Parker after falling in love with his "Stage Beauty" co-star Claire Danes, prompting a Hollywood scandal of the most epic proportions - and now, almost 12 years later, Mary-Louise Parker's "Weeds" feelings on the matter resurface.
Parker, now 51, is about to release a memoir called "Dear Mr. You," apparently dedicated to all the men in her life - and of course, as people died to know whether Crudup's scandalous behavior would be making the cut in the book, so Mary-Louise Parker from "Weeds" seemingly heard everyone's questions.
Jezebel recently released an excerpt from the recent memoir written by Mary-Louise Parker from "Weeds," taken from a chapter called "Dear Mr. Cabdriver" (the entire book is written as a collection of letters addressed to different people), where she yells at a New York City cabdriver for getting her lost to an appointment - and goes into a sad conversation with him about how she's pregnant and alone.
As Us Weekly reports, at the time Parker yelled at the taxi driver things got so bad that he asked her to leave, saying he didn't want her there anymore - to which she sadly replied that "no one" did, in what seemed to be her lowest moment, one that over a decade later Mary-Louise Parker from "Weeds" apologizes for in what reads like the lyrics of a 1990s Alanis Morissette song.
"What I wish I could tell you is that I know it may have been. I don't know what happened to you that morning, or that year, or when you were six," wrote Mary-Louise Parker from "Weeds" in her books. "I didn't know your tragedy or hardship and it was grossly unfair of me to compare my life to yours."
While The New York Times praised Parker's book and the way she skipped having to name names, not long after the actress sat down with Savannah Guthrie and said she'd wanted to "write something that was positive."
Listen to Mary-Louise Parker from "Weeds" speaking about her new book in the clip below!