
Doris Roberts: 13 Facts About the ‘Everybody Loves Raymond’ Star
Check out the sometimes rocky road that led the actress to become the mother of all TV mothers
When it comes to mothers on TV sitcoms, nobody did it better than Doris Roberts, who portrayed them a number of times, but never as effectively as Everybody Loves Raymond’s Marie Barone. Here she was at 5′ 1″ tall, a little dynamo who, when she chose to use her gifts of guilt or anger, intimidated the other members of her family, including 6′ 8″ son Robert.
The power that emanated from Doris Roberts — despite the fact it was played on the show for comedy — was actually reflective and a result of the journey she took in life. Born on November 4, 1925 in St. Louis, Missouri, she had (justifiably) “daddy issues” due to the fact her father abandoned she and her mother when she was a child; she fought like hell to establish herself as an actress — a marriage coming together and falling apart in the process — and began eeking out roles on Broadway and in television guest appearances, before scoring some film roles.
Her credits are extensive, though there were only a handful of TV shows that she was a regular cast member on, including Angie (1979 to 1980), Maggie (1981), Remington Steele (1983 to 1987) and, of course, Everybody Loves Raymond (1996 to 2005), not to mention all of the recurring roles she portrayed as well.
Over the course of a career that began in 1951 and went until 2015, she won five Emmy Awards and One Screen Actor’s Guild award. Beyond that, Doris Roberts was an animal rights advocate, working with Puppies Behind Bars, a program that allows prison inmates to train dogs for the elderly and physically disabled; and she was Chairman of the Children with AIDS Foundation.