Little House on the Prairie is a famous drama series about the Ingalls family’s experiences at the turn of the 20th century that an entire generation of TV viewers vividly remembers.
It’s a show that frequently leaves viewers thinking, “Where are they now?” due to its large ensemble of endearing characters and performances.
One of the performers that left show business behind was Melissa Sue Anderson, who played Mary Ingalls on the program. Recently, she explained why she departed Hollywood and the spotlight.
In Berkeley, California, Melissa Sue Anderson was born on September 26, 1962. She was an introverted child who preferred reading books to climbing trees. However, the young lady with the marble-clear blue eyes quickly caught the attention of everyone around her for her stage presence. One of the girl’s dance instructors suggested to her parents that they speak with an agency.
Anderson, an A-student, started her acting career as a child actress, playing the character of Millicent on The Brady Bunch and Bewitched, where she gave Bobby his first kiss. However, after being cast as Mary Ingalls, one of the main characters, in Little House, she had her big break and defining role.
She had a starring role for the first seven seasons and guest roles for the last eight. Anderson was nominated for the award for Best Lead Actress in a Drama Series as well.
“I’m lucky that there even was a character to play, because in the book, there isn’t much of one,” she tells me from her home in Montreal. “Laura [Ingalls, author of the Little House novels upon which the series was based and the story was centered] was a quite older woman when she wrote the books. She was remembering the best of her life. The characters of Ma and Mary didn’t factor in a lot. There was a lot of Laura and Pa and Laura and Jack the dog and Laura and Mr. Edwards, but there wasn’t a lot of Mary. I’m fortunate that they discovered that I could act,” Anderson told Pop Entertainment in 2010.
It wasn’t simple for the young actress, who was still in high school, to rise to fame as one of the nation’s most recognizable faces.
”A lot of kids at school are curious and ask inappropriate questions, like, ’How much do you make?’ That’s embarrassing. I’ll just give them a look that lets them know what I think of the question or tell them it’s none of their business,” she told Iowa City Press-Citizen in 1977.