Eric Roberts apologizes to sister Julia Roberts after saying he made her famous: 'An asinine thing to have said'

"That’s not only unfortunate, but it’s also untrue."

Eric Roberts once claimed responsibility for his sister Julia Roberts' career — and now, he's publicly retracting that statement.

In his new memoir, Runaway Train: Or the Story of My Life So Far, the prolific character actor apologizes to his sister for saying he made her famous. "Now one of the things I’d like to apologize for in this book is for publicly saying on more than one occasion, 'If it wasn’t for me, there would be no Julia Roberts,'" Roberts writes. "That’s not only unfortunate, but it’s also untrue. And I hope Julie will accept this more public apology. It was an asinine thing to have said. I was proud of her, but it was pride turned on its head, to my own advantage." (Roberts also talks in the book about family members referring to the Oscar-winning star as Julie.)

<p>Isa Foltin/WireImage; Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty </p> Eric Roberts and Julia Roberts

Isa Foltin/WireImage; Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty

Eric Roberts and Julia Roberts

Roberts notes that Julia could have easily succeeded without his intervention. "She’s a very driven woman," he says. "Someone would have plucked her out of the crowd in a place like New York without my help."

Still, later in the same chapter, Roberts does unpack how his success as an actor may have inspired his sister's pursuit of showbusiness. "I was born to do this. I moved to New York City when I wasn’t even old enough to drink a beer in public," he writes. "If Julie had stayed in Atlanta, she’d probably have married a wealthy dude and lived a very different life. So I will take credit, once I had broken away from my father (or thought I had) and moved to New York City, for telling my sisters, 'Come on up, girls; the water’s fine.' That’s when, it seems to me, she saw my life as a young actor in New York, and saw what I was doing for my livelihood, and she wanted to try it."

Related: Eric Roberts makes his DWTS dream come true after 19 years: 'Petrifying'

Roberts goes on to explain that Julia and their other sister, Lisa, moved in with him in his Manhattan apartment. "Little did they know that I would become so difficult to be around," he writes. "That’s why Julie and Lisa soon wanted a place of their own. I was already deep into drugs. They lived with me for the better part of a year, and then I got them their own place."

Roberts says that he paid for his sisters' apartment for a year. "I needed my privacy because I was such a f---ed-up guy who wanted to do f---ed-up things, but I had enough sense to take care of them, to get them out of my apartment and out of harm’s way."

Related: Emma Roberts calls working with aunt Julia Roberts' former costar Richard Gere a 'full circle' moment

<p>Disney/Eric McCandless/Getty</p> Eric Roberts at 'Dancing With the Stars'

Disney/Eric McCandless/Getty

Eric Roberts at 'Dancing With the Stars'

Roberts once publicized his claim to his sister's fame in a 2018 Vanity Fair interview, where he discussed both the Pretty Woman actress and his daughter, American Horror Story star Emma Roberts. “If it wasn’t for me, there would be no Julia Roberts and no Emma Roberts as celebrities, as actresses, and I’m very proud of that. When Julia first came to New York, I went into William Morris and I said, ‘Which one of you is going to sign my sister Julia?’” Eric Roberts said in the interview. "And I am so proud that everybody knows I was first, because I was first by a long shot. I was first to get Golden Globe and Academy Award nominations, so I’m proud of that."

Related: Here's why Emma Roberts hasn't worked with her aunt Julia

In that same interview, Roberts reflected on why his relationship with his superstar sister had its ups and downs. "I was exhausting to be around,” he said of his demeanor at the height of his drug addiction. "Complainy, blamey, unable to enjoy enjoyment. Everyone in my world needed a break sometimes, and that must have included Julia." He clarified, "I was crazy about my sisters. Loved them, adored them. They were precious to me, and we had times of great closeness. We all felt very protective of each other, but the hardest person to protect yourself from is yourself."

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In an interview with Still Here Hollywood earlier this year, Roberts dodged a question about his sister and daughter. “I love my sister, but I can't talk about her. She doesn't wanna talk about it," he said. “My daughter told me also not not to talk about her, but I stumble and do." He later said, “I'm not supposed to talk about either of them. But I do.”

Eric Roberts' memoir Runaway Train: Or the Story of My Life So Far is available now.

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