Gilbert Comes Home To "Little House"
Actress Who Rose To Fame As Laura In TV Drama Plays Her Ma Onstage
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Melissa Gilbert poses backstage at the 11th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards Feb. 5, 2005, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon, file)
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Gilbert, who spent most of her childhood portraying the bold pioneer girl on television, is cast as the proper and reserved Caroline "Ma" Ingalls in the Guthrie Theater's musical version of "Little House on the Prairie."
She sings. She dances. She teases out Ma's wild side. Previews started Saturday, and the show opens Aug. 15. Advance ticket sales have broken the theater's record, and the run already has been extended an additional two weeks to Oct. 19.
The role sent the 44-year-old actress back to her "Little House" books for a fresh take on material she first dug into at age 9, underlining in crayon.
When it comes to Ma, Gilbert told The Associated Press last week that she sees "a whimsical loss" in the family matriarch - glimmers of a headstrong girl tamed by life.
"There's the girl she used to be that she sees in Laura," said Gilbert, who played Laura on TV from 1974 to 1983 and now has two sons and two stepsons. "But she has to be able to model how to find a way to be satisfied with the life that's ahead of her. There were no other choices for women back then."
On television, Gilbert grew up in Walnut Grove, Minn., the setting of the book "On the Banks of Plum Creek."
In real life, she has yet to visit any of Laura Ingalls Wilder's childhood homes in Minnesota, Wisconsin, South Dakota, Kansas or Iowa. The TV show was shot in Simi Valley, Calif. The red-haired actress first came to Minnesota in February to start work on the musical and set fingers pointing when fans recognized her in Laura Ingalls Wilder territory.
Gilbert wants the Guthrie "Little House" cast to pile into a van and visit Walnut Grove, about three hours' drive west-southwest of Minneapolis. "I think I need to put my feet in Plum Creek," she said. "I think that would be a moment for me."
It would also be a moment for Walnut Grove, where Amy Ankrum, director of the Laura Ingalls Wilder Museum there, said that nearly 1,000 fans turned out earlier in July to see Lindsay and Sidney Greenbush, the twins who played Laura's younger sister Carrie on TV.
"I can hardly imagine what kind of a crowd Melissa would bring if they knew she was coming," said Ankrum, who grew up in Walnut Grove reading the books and watching "Little House" on television. She and 14 others are planning to see the musical in September.
Anticipation is high for the first major new interpretation of "Little House" in a quarter century, with fans lining up last month for tickets. Gilbert is performing alongside Steve Blanchard as "Pa" and Jenn Gambatese as Laura's sister Mary. Newcomer Kara Lindsay plays Laura.
Gilbert said she wasn't sure at first that austere stories of family life in the 1870s and 1880s would work as a musical, but the script and score won her over. Rachel Sheinkin wrote the musical, with music by Rachel Portman and lyrics by Donna di Novelli. It's directed by Francesca Zambello, who guided "The Little Mermaid" to Broadway last season.
Gilbert's next challenge was singing. Though she grew up loving such musicals as "Gypsy" and "Annie," she didn't share her mother's confidence in her voice. Still, she worked with a vocal coach and it came together.
Zambello said Gilbert's name came up as a potential Ma once the musical was written.
"Of course, her connection to the material was fascinating," Zambello said.
By Martiga Lohn
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





without saying 1 cuss word. Imagine that.
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Yes but when a "cuss word" was said (or thier version of it) one always got into trouble.
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You are correct sir. You don''t see shows like this on TV anymore.Alway''s had a good life lesson to be learned on every show without saying 1 cuss word. Imagine that.