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  1. Dec 23, 2022 · Marion Ross attends Garry Marshall Theatre's 3rd Annual Founder's Gala Honoring Original "Happy Days" Cast at The Jonathan Club on November 13, 2019 in Los Angeles, California | Source: Getty Images She said she felt like being her age allowed her permission to rest.

  2. Marion Ross (born October 25, 1928) is an American actress. She portrayed Marion Cunningham in Happy Days. She is the voice of Grandma SquarePants on SpongeBob SquarePants, and also voiced Rebecca the Elephant Queen in The Wild Thornberrys episode "Forget Me Not". Ross made her 1953 film debut in Forever Female, starring Ginger Rogers and William Holden. She found steady work in film, appearing in The Glenn Miller Story (1954), Sabrina (1954), Lust for Life (1956), Lizzie (1957), Teacher's Pet (

  3. 97 people search results for marion-ross- Person. Marion Ross

  4. Marion Ross. Actress: Superhero Movie. The lovely, cheery, continuously upbeat All-American mom from the classic Happy Days (1974) TV sitcom had fervent desires of becoming an actress while growing up in her obscure Minnesota town. Born Marian Ross (with an "a") on October 25, 1928, she grew up in her native state and, at one time, worked as a teenage au pair in order to earn money for drama lessons...

  5. Oct 7, 2009 · TV: South side of the 6400 block of Hollywood Boulevard. Actress Born Oct. 25, 1928 in Watertown, MN. L ong before she became an iconic TV mom, Marion Ross — a.k.a. Mrs. Cunningham from “Happy Days” — dreamed of becoming an actress. “The desire was enormous that I had. I was about 13,” Ross said, “and by the time I was 22 I was ...

  6. Ross also made the most of Marion's relationship with Henry Winkler's Arthur Fonzarelli, whose Brando-esque cool was tamed by her affectionate concern for his well-being. Ross and co-star Anson Williams were the only cast members to remain with the series from its pilot status to its final episode in 1984, themselves becoming household names after it had left the air.

  7. Apr 30, 2024 · Ross loved her television family just as much as Marion Cunningham loved Richie. Part of the reason Ross played the "mom" character so well onscreen is because off-screen, Ross had a family of her own. In the 1970s, Ross was fully immersed in two worlds of teenagers that were 20 years apart. Luckily, she was good with kids.