The Sentinel-Record

‘Little House’ author’s life, times examined in PBS film

- LYNN ELBER

LOS ANGELES — A new documentar­y about the life and work of “Little House on the Prairie” author Laura Ingalls Wilder puts her novels’ scattered racist references in historical context, the film’s producers said.

Wilder’s work reflects the perspectiv­e of her family and attitudes in the late 1800s Midwest, the setting for the coming-of-age novels based on her childhood, said Mary McDonagh Murphy, director and producer of PBS’ “American Masters” biography.

There are about five to eight scenes that are racist, “particular­ly with respect to Native Amer- icans,” and a scene involving blackface, Murphy said during an online news conference to discuss the documentar­y that debuts Dec. 29.

Does that disqualify the authentici­ty of the “churning butter and the throwing the pig bladder and all those other really great parts of the books that have to do with … frontier life and how the families survived?” Murphy said.

“I think we can count on her as a reliable narrator for much of that,” she said.

Michael Kantor, the executive producer of “Laura Ingalls Wilder,” and Murphy said the documentar­y’s developmen­t relied on experts, including the head of Native American initiative­s at the Minnesota Historical Society.

“We’ve been working very carefully with the academic community to make sure we tell a fair and truthful history, which we think will be no less interestin­g,” Kantor said.

Melissa Gilbert, who as a child actor played Ingalls in the 1970s to ’80s TV series based on the novels, is part of the documentar­y that includes other cast members, Wilder biographer­s and writers Louise Erdrich and Roxane Gay.

“I am constantly amazed by how much more there is for me to learn (about Ingalls) because I’ve had the opportunit­y to come at the ‘Little House’ story from so many different angles in so many different ways,” Gilbert said.

 ?? Submitted photo ?? Members of Hot Springs Emblem Club No. 194 prepared around 100 lunches at Jackson House on Wednesday. Jackson House is an interfaith community crisis center providing short-term emergency assistance of basic needs to those in need in the community. From left are Diane Gates, Gail McKee, Sally Hatten, Patricia Sitzenstoc­k and Emblem President Ginger Yates.
Submitted photo Members of Hot Springs Emblem Club No. 194 prepared around 100 lunches at Jackson House on Wednesday. Jackson House is an interfaith community crisis center providing short-term emergency assistance of basic needs to those in need in the community. From left are Diane Gates, Gail McKee, Sally Hatten, Patricia Sitzenstoc­k and Emblem President Ginger Yates.
 ??  ?? Laura Ingalls Wilder
Laura Ingalls Wilder

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