Canadian ‘Little House on the Prairie’ actors talk Indigenous representation in Netflix retelling
Actors in Netflix’s upcoming “Little House on the Prairie” series say the latest adaptation of Laura Ingalls Wilder’s book series was intentional about portraying its Indigenous characters with depth and avoiding the racial stereotypes that the original text has been criticized for utilizing.
Ojibwe actor Meegwun Fairbrother says the producers wanted an inclusive retelling of the novels that depict a white family settling in the American West on Osage land in the 19th century, and that they wanted to avoid any continuation of “the history of erasure of Indigenous peoples in North America.”
The semi-autobiographical books and previous screen adaptations have been criticized by scholars and Indigenous communities for their depiction of Native American characters and the way the colonial narrative is centred. Wilder’s name was removed from a children’s literature award in 2018, with the organizer, the Association for Library Service to Children, saying the “author’s legacy is complex and Wilder’s work is not universally embraced.”
The eight-episode first season, which was filmed in Winnipeg and premieres Thursday, follows the Ingalls family in the 1870s as they head west across America with the promise of “free land.” However, after settling on Osage Nation territory, they find out the U.S. government is still negotiating a land treaty and they have essentially become squatters.











