Melissa Gilbert Kept Quiet About Rob Lowe for Decades — What She Finally Said Has Left Every Fan Completely Stunned

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Melissa Gilbert and Rob Lowe were one of Hollywood’s most closely watched young couples in the early 1980s — two of the most recognizable faces of their generation, both carrying the particular weight of having grown up almost entirely in the public eye, both navigating the specific and largely unsupported challenge of being famous before they were fully formed, and both drawn together in the way that people who have experienced the same unusual and isolating thing sometimes find each other and recognize something in the other person that nobody on the outside quite understands.

Melissa was America’s Half-Pint — Laura Ingalls grown up and stepping out of Walnut Grove into a Hollywood that had very specific and very immediate plans for a young woman of her recognizability and her appeal — and Rob Lowe was already the face that was going to define a certain idea of what young male stardom looked like for the decade that followed. They were together for years, and the relationship that the public watched from a careful distance was the kind that the tabloids of the era described with the vocabulary of fairy tales and that the people inside it experienced, as all real relationships are experienced, in a considerably more complicated register. Melissa Gilbert kept quiet about what that relationship actually was — about what Rob Lowe was actually like, about what she actually went through, and about the specific truths that a young woman in love with a young man in the full and unsparing glare of early 1980s Hollywood accumulates and carries and learns from and eventually, when enough time and enough life have passed, finds the courage and the language to finally say out loud. What she has finally said has stunned the fans who grew up watching both of them and who believed they already knew this particular chapter of the story — because the version Melissa Gilbert has kept quiet about for decades turns out to be considerably more honest and considerably more human than the one the cameras and the fan magazines were ever allowed to capture.

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