Career Highlights: Brazil, The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, Time Bandits
First Major Screen Credit: The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman (1974)
Biography
American actress Katherine Helmond spent nearly thirty years becoming an overnight success. Working fitfully in New York and regional theatre throughout the '50s and '60s, Helmond made ends meet by working as a drama teacher. Her first fleeting film appearances were in the Manhattan-based Believe in Me and The Hospital, both shot in 1971. She received a sizeable role in 1975's The Hindenburg, which utilized local repertory actors from throughout the midwest; she also worked with Hitchcock in 1976's Family Plot. In 1977, Katherine was cast as Jessica Tate, the scatterbrained, hedonistic matriarch on the TV sitcom Soap. She remained with the series until its cancellation in 1981; Soap left poor Jessica Tate facing a firing squad, and didn't reveal her fate until Helmond's guest appearance on the Soap spinoff Benson, wherein she played Jessica's ghost. In 1983, Katherine enrolled in the American Film Institute's Directing Workshop; she helmed the short subject Bankrupt and also several episodes of TV's Who's the Boss, in which she played Mona Robinson from 1984 through 1990. Keeping her hand in films, Katherine Helmond became a favorite of ex-Monty Python director Terry Gilliam, who cast the actress as a vain matron undergoing a really radical facelift in 1984's Brazil. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Helmond first came to fame as "Jessica Tate," the matriarch on Soap. She was a lead player on the controversial ABC series, from 1977 until it was cancelled in 1981.
In 1984, she took the role of "Mona Robinson" on the sitcomWho's the Boss?. The show was a ratings success, running for eight seasons and finishing in the Nielsen "Top 10" four straight years. In 1993 she appeared in one episode of the British version of Who's the Boss?.[1]
From 1995–1997, she starred in the sitcom Coach as Doris Sherman, eccentric owner of the fictional Orlando Breakers professional football team.
From 1996 to 2004, Helmond had a recurring role on Everybody Loves Raymond, appearing in 14 episodes as “Lois Whelan” (Ray Barone's mother-in-law).
Film appearances
She has appeared in three movies directed by Terry Gilliam:
In 1992 she portrayed Honor Zetterland, mother of the titular character in Inside Monkey Zetterland. Her character was an aging soap star who was being phased out of her own show on which she had starred for 30 years.
She voiced the Model T “Lizzie” in Cars (in 2006).
She had also appeared in the 1975 television movie The Legend of Lizzie Borden as Emma Borden.
Award nominations
She was nominated for Broadway’s 1973 Tony Award as Best Supporting or Featured Actress (Dramatic) for Eugene O'Neill's The Great God Brown.
She was nominated for an Emmy for her role on Soap four times in a row (1978–1981) as Best Actress in a Comedy Series. In 1988 and 1989 she was nominated as Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for her role on Who's the Boss?. In 2002 she was nominated as Guest Actress in a Comedy Series for her role in Everybody Loves Raymond.
Personal life
Katherine attended Bob Jones University in the early 1950s.[2] She played the female heroine in BJU's 1955 cinematic release, "Wine of Morning,"[3] based on the book of the same title written, in 1950, by Bob Jones, Jr.[4]
In 1957, Helmond married George N. Martin. After their divorce she married her second husband, David Christian; the two have been together since 1962; they have no children. They have owned homes in Los Angeles, New York City, Long Island and London.