Fifty-two years after the launch of Michael Landon’s cult series Little House on the Prairie, Netflix is unveiling its own version of the Ingalls saga this Thursday, July 9. Renewed casting, tightened format, rethought historical perspective, here are five keys to understanding what brings the two works together and what distinguishes them.
1 – A series from autobiographical books
Netflix is not recycling the series launched in 1974. The platform starts directly from the nine autobiographical novels published by Laura Ingalls Wilder between 1932 and 1943. These texts have been translated into at least 27 languages and sold more than 73 million copies worldwide, according to figures communicated by Netflix.
This content is blocked because you have not accepted cookies and other trackers.
I manage my choices I authorize
The producer of this new Little House on the Prairie, Rebecca Sonnenshine, already known for The Boys or Vampire Diaries, insisted on this point to the American press: her team was above all concerned with respecting the books, faithfully recreating their details, rather than taking inspiration from Michael Landon’s series. This had largely freed itself from the original story to construct its own television mythology, centered on the fictional village of Walnut Grove. This place does not appear in this new first season, since the action takes place entirely before the family’s arrival in Minnesota.
2 – In Kansas rather than Minnesota
Broadcast on NBC between 1974 and 1983, the original series had nine seasons, 205 episodes and three television films, all carried from start to finish by Michael Landon, who combined the roles of actor, screenwriter, director and producer. The 2026 version, for the moment, only has eight episodes, all devoted to a single episode in the life of the Ingalls: their installation in Kansas, near the emerging town of Independence. The 1970s series resolved this stage in a simple TV movie before sending the family to Minnesota.
Several emblematic characters from the original series do not yet appear in this first season, due to this chronological tightening, starting with Nellie and Harriet Oleson, Reverend Alden or even Doctor Baker. A second season has nevertheless already been ordered by Netflix.
3 – A revealing series of many stars
The original series remains one of the most awarded in its genre with 17 Emmy Award nominations, including 4 wins, 3 Golden Globe nominations and 2 People’s Choice Awards. But beyond the trophies, it is above all a formidable career springboard that “Prairie” represented for several young actors.
Jason Bateman made his debut there, and above all, the very last season of the series saw a certain Shannen Doherty appear, then aged around ten, in the role of Jenny Wilder, the niece of Laura’s suitor. A few years later, she would become Brenda Walsh in Beverly Hills, 90210, then Prue Halliwell in Charmed, before her death in July 2024 at age 53. The cast of the Netflix series, partly made up of young actors little known to the general public, could in turn reveal new talents.
4 – Changes in the characters
Luke Bracey, Australian actor who starred in Point Break and the Elvis Presley biopic, succeeds Michael Landon in the role of Charles Ingalls. Skywalker Hughes inherits the role of Mary, the one whose tragic fate had moved generations of viewers. A nod is reserved for the most nostalgic with the appearance of Alison Arngrim, who played Nellie Oleson in the original version and who appears in the role of another character in the second episode of this new series.
Beyond the actors, several characters evolve. This is particularly the case of the doctor, who completely changes his nature. Exit Doctor Baker, a pure invention of the 1970s series, he makes way for Doctor George Tann, a black doctor who actually treated the Ingalls family from malaria in Kansas, played by Jocko Sims.
5 – A place finally given to Native Americans
Laura Ingalls Wilder’s novels, like the 1974 series, have long been criticized for their treatment of indigenous populations: the mother of the family made openly racist comments, and one of the books even used the formula “A good Indian is a dead Indian” attributed to General Sheridan, infamous for his violent tactics during the Indian Wars. These elements weighed heavily on the posterity of the work, in 2018, the prestigious children’s literature award which bore the author’s name, the “Wilder Medal” was renamed the “Children’s Literature Legacy Award”.
The new version attempts to correct this imbalance by placing the Osage people at the center of the story, with the support of several specialized consultants. The cast also includes many Native American actors, like Alyssa Wapanatâhk, an actress of Cree origin, an Algonquian people from North America. The series also features an Osage family living near the Ingalls and evokes a key moment in their history, the signing of the Treaty of Drum Creek in 1870, which marked their forced removal to Oklahoma.





