Melissa Gilbert spent nine years as Laura Ingalls on Little House on the Prairie growing up in the most literal sense of that phrase — arriving on that set as a child of ten and leaving it as a young woman of nineteen, with everything that happens in the years between those two ages happening in front of cameras, under the creative authority of Michael Landon, and inside the specific and unusual environment of a television production that was simultaneously a workplace and a family and a world unto itself in ways that no amount of adult retrospection has ever fully been able to untangle.
Michael Landon was Half-Pint’s father and he was Melissa Gilbert’s professional father and he was her creative mentor and he was her employer and he was the most powerful person in her professional world for the entirety of the years when she was still becoming whoever she was going to be — a combination of roles and a concentration of influence that the adult Melissa Gilbert has always described with the careful, measured language of someone who loves the man the show created and who is simultaneously honest enough to acknowledge that the reality of that relationship was considerably more complicated than the warm, sunlit prairie that the cameras captured. The silence she maintained about Michael Landon for years after his death in 1991 was not the silence of someone with nothing to say — it was the silence of someone with a great deal to say who was working out, with obvious difficulty and obvious care, what the responsible and the honest and the fair version of saying it actually looked like. At 61, having lived enough of her own life to have the full perspective that proximity and youth and loyalty make temporarily impossible, Melissa Gilbert has finally admitted why she stayed quiet for so long — and the reason turns out to be more human and more complicated and more worth understanding than anyone who was waiting for a simple answer ever anticipated.