Once upon a time in early-2000s Hollywood, Frankie Muniz and Hilary Duff were more than co-stars—they were friends. Muniz told how Duff invited him to appear on Lizzie McGuire, they hung out… everything seemed chill. Then came the surprise casting twist that changed everything.
According to Muniz, the turning point happened when Duff’s mother quietly arranged for Duff to land the female lead in Agent Cody Banks—a role Muniz says he had contractual input on. He said the studio bypassed him, telling him after the fact that “we’re spending summer together” when it came to filming. That blindsided him, and he felt disrespected.

Muniz says he hasn’t spoken a word to Duff since filming wrapped. Not out of anger at her—but because the casting situation left a sour taste he couldn’t shake. “Hilary was so cool… we had an awesome relationship,” he said. “But her mom—she was super intense.”
Now older and wiser, Muniz admits he regrets letting the fallout ruin a friendship. He said he would love to sit down with Duff and talk it out, assuming she might not even know the full story.

This isn’t just celebrity small talk—it reads like a classic Hollywood cautionary tale: friendships formed as child stars, trust tied to big casting decisions, and sudden changes behind the scenes altering everything. It also shows how power imbalances—casting control, parental influence, behind-the-scenes decisions—can quietly end something great before it really starts.
Muniz’s openness gives a rare insider view of how a simple friendship can get tangled in contracts, ambition, and stage-mom energy—and lose. For Duff, the silence speaks volumes; for Muniz, it’s a regret he’s now willing to own.