photography by Baldomero Fernandez
by Zoe Stagg
Real New Yorkers can do anything in the back of a cab, and Mary-Louise Parker is a real New Yorker. When her cab driver starts yelling out his window mid-conversation, she pauses until he’s done, and picks up again without missing a detail in her trademark, deadpan cadence. She’s a chameleon for a living, playing parts that range from a drug-dealing, suburban mom on Showtime’s Weeds to an action-movie damsel opposite Bruce Willis in the comic-to-screen movie Red, to her Tony-winning turn in Broadway’s Proof. It’s all a quick-change act that she’s pulled off since childhood. “I was exposed to lots growing up. I was never just with the rich kids, or the poor kids, or the middle class kids. I think that just being able to be comfortable with being the odd person out allows you to go into different situations and observe and just learn and not be scared. I feel like people who are really overburdened with a sense of self image are less likely to try new things. I spent a lot of time between the extremes in my life – and my family spent time in different levels of comfort – and I think that was really useful for me.” Parker has managed to take that skill and parlay it into a career that not many actresses can boast: a resume of projects without pigeon holes and no sign of stopping. But her success today has always had a price tag. “I felt like the odd one out a lot – because I was. And I still do a lot of the time. I never fit in. It wasn’t a question of learning to fit in, because I never have.”
Growing up as the daughter of an Army dad, outsider Parker moved around a lot, gaining worldly perspective along the way. “My parents really exposed me to all kinds of people. There was never any prejudice in our home about what you did, or how much money you had. It wasn’t like that.” That’s part of her upbringing she’s eager to pass on. “I want my kids to be like that too. My son went with me when I went to Africa,” Parker recalls of when she adopted a daughter from Ethiopia in 2007, “and it was really important to me that he saw that. I’m really conscious of the fact that they are in certain ways very over-privileged. Though in other ways I’m also very conscious of ways that it’s hard for them for me to be their mom. So I just have to neutralize all that, and hopefully they just feel loved and feel like they have a magical life – the one that I want them to have, and that my parents tried to give me.”