
Little House On The Prairie
1 9 7 4 - 1 9 8 3 (USA)
183 x 60 minute episodes
Based
on the books by Laura Ingles Wildes, this series purported to show
what life was like on the frontier in the late 1870s.
Many children grew up watching Michael Landon, Karen Grassle,
Melissa Sue Anderson and Melissa Gilbert deal with the joys and
sorrows of life in the little town of Walnut Grove (population
127), but the show was basically a soap opera.
Little House On The Prairie was certainly not a Western
in the usual sense. There were no cowboys, Indians or saloons in
this version of frontier life. There were, however, many
illnesses, deaths, misfortunes, miracles and 'heart warming'
moments.
Charles Ingalls was a homesteader struggling to make a living
for his family on a small farm in Minnesota. The Ingalls had moved
from the great plains of Kansas to Walnut Grove in search of a
future in a young and growing community.
With Charles was his wife, Caroline, and their three daughters:
teenagers Mary and Laura, and little Carrie (played alternately by
identical twins).
Stories revolved around the experiences of family life and
growing children, the constant struggle against natural disasters
and ruined crops, and the dealings with other members of the
little town in which they lived.
Among the Ingalls' friends were: Mr. Hanson, the mill owner;
Nels Oleson, the owner of the general store (and husband of the
hag Harriet and father of the junior-hag, Nellie) and Mr. Edwards,
a nearby farmer who became a good friend despite his harsh
exterior.
And what a shining example Charles Ingalls
(pictured at left) was to the youth of
today. Working six hours a day for some lumber company, then
another six hours stacking grain, then another few ploughing his
farm ... all to keep his family together and raise a crop to feed
his little women.
Even when he fell out of a tree and broke his ribs he still
dragged himself to work and carried on stacking the corn sacks in
agony.
In 1978, Caroline gave birth to a fourth daughter, Grace.
Oldest daughter Mary lost her sight and was sent to a school for
the blind where she fell in love with her instructor, Adam
Kendall, and they moved off to the Dakotas.
No sooner were they gone than the town of Walnut Grove fell on
hard times and Charles and his family - along with some of the
other cast regulars - had to pack up and move to the bustling
frontier city of Winoka, where their household was expanded again
by the addition of Albert, a young orphan they adopted.
City life
didn't sit well with the family, especially Albert who had to
battle to overcome a severe drug addiction (?!).
Eventually, they all moved back to Walnut Grove, which had
miraculously recovered from its problems. Mary and Adam moved back
too, and had a baby boy, who unfortunately perished when the
school for the blind where Mary was teaching burned down.
Feeling left out by all of the turmoil, daughter Laura decided
to become a teacher and was courted by and eventually married
Almanzo Wilder, in the fall of 1980.
Even nasty Nellie Oleson got married, although problems arose
when it was discovered that her husband, Percival, was really
Jewish (Isaac Cohen) and a decision had to be made about how to
raise their children. Since Nellie had twins, everything was
resolved by deciding to raise their son as a Jew and their
daughter as a Christian!
Jonathan Garvey, now a widower, moved to nearby Sleepy Eye to
manage a warehouse, and convinced Charles to set up a freight
business between there and Walnut Grove. Amazingly Adam regained
his sight in a freak accident and was accepted to law school.
In the fall of 1981, Adam's father offered him a job with his
law firm in New York, and Adam and Mary left Walnut Grove
permanently.
There were more adoptions in the 1981-1982 season. Charles and
Caroline added recently orphaned James and Cassandra Cooper to
their household, and lonely Mrs. Oleson took in an orphan named
Nancy - who bore a striking resemblance to her departed daughter,
Nellie, in both looks and nastiness. Laura meanwhile gave birth to
a daughter, Rose.
Michael Landon's decision to leave Little House prompted
a number of changes in the fall of 1982. The title was changed to Little
House: A New Beginning, and Laura and Almanzo became the major
stars. Economic problems forced Charles to sell the farm and move
to Burr Oak, Iowa, where he had found a job.
Moving into the former Ingalls home were John and Sarah Carter,
who ran the town newspaper, and their sons Jeb and Jason. Laura
gave up her teaching job to raise both Rose and Jenny, who was
orphaned when Almanzo's brother, Royal, died.
Laura's replacement at the school, Etta Plum, was portrayed by
Michael Landon's real-life daughter Leslie. This new series lasted
only one season.
|