
Netflix's Little House on the Prairie reboot reveals its cast
The Little House on the Prairie reboot cast has been revealed, four months after Netflix announced their plans to release a new take on the beloved Western series.
Although it is hard to imagine anyone else portraying members of the Ingalls family, the new faces of the characters, based on the classic books by Laura Ingalls Wilder, have been unveiled.
Australian actor, Luke Bracey, best known for his roles in Elvis, Monte Carlo, G.I. Joe: Retaliation, will be portraying Charles Ingalls, also known as 'Pa.'
Meanwhile, up-and-coming actress, Crosby Fitzgerald will play Ma, Caroline Ingalls, Alice Halsey will portray Laura and Skywalker Hughes will star as Laura's older sister, Mary.
It has been more than 40 years since the original, long-running series wrapped its final episode after nine seasons in 1984.
In a statement, obtained by The Hollywood Reporter, Jinny Howe, vp drama series for Netflix, revealed that the reboot will be a 'fresh take on this iconic story.'
Howe also praised showrunner Rebecca Sonnenshine for bringing 'emotional depth that will delight both new and existing fans of this beloved classic.'
'I fell deeply in love with these books when I was five years old. They inspired me to become a writer and a filmmaker, and I am honored and thrilled to be adapting these stories for a new global audience with Netflix,' Sonnenshine said of the upcoming project.
Following the announcement on X, social media users expressed outrage and worry that the reboot would be too 'woke.'
'Please don't ruin another treasured piece of literature and Americana,' one tweeted.
A second wrote: 'Reimagining? No thank you.'
'Why does it have to be "reimagined"? You're going to screw this up,' a third predicted.
Another pleaded with Netflix to 'leave things alone for the love of God.'
'If this is made from a woke leftist perspective the family should sue Netflix,' a fifth wrote.
Others begged the streamer not to touch Little House on the Prairie as they stressed they didn't want to see a 'politically correct' version of the show.
'Play the old ones, I'd watch those,' another X user tweeted.
A large handful of Netflix subscribers also said they would not watch if it did not stay 'faithful to the original books/tv show.'
Others, however, tweeted their excitement and called the news 'awesome.'
In June, the Little House on the Prairie cast reunited at the Monte Carlo Television Festival in Monaco.
Karen Grassle, Alison Arngrim, Melissa Sue Anderson, Matthew Labyorteaux, and Wendi Lou Lee sat on a panel and reflected on their favorite memories from the show.
They also addressed fans questions about a reboot or reunion of the series.
'There have been lots of attempts to do a Little House on the Prairie again,' Grassle, 82, who played the show's matriarch Caroline Ingalls, explained to People.
'There have been shows, there have been a musical, and I think we had a unique experience and it can't be repeated.'
'Michael [Landon] was a genius at casting and writing,' she added of her onscreen husband, who played Charles Ingalls.
'He understood things about how to translate that material into television for the public that was beyond what most writers understand.
'And he had his thumb on the pulse of the public and understood what people were longing for, and you don't find that every day,' she gushed about the late actor who was also an executive producer and writer for the show.
'And then the fact that we were all so perfectly cast was a kind of genius,' she added, looking at her costars.
Anderson, who played eldest sister Mary Ingalls, had her own reason for thinking a reboot wouldn't work and its because Landon wouldn't be part of it.
'Little House works on television because of him,' she said. Landon died in 1991.
Arngrim, 62, who played Nellie Oleson in the series is ready to take on a new role if there was ever a reboot of Little House – her mother.
'I always joke that if they do redo the entire thing, I am ready to play Mrs. Oleson. Absolutely, I'm down for that,' she sassed.
Little House on the Prairie followed the adventures of the Ingalls family as they built a homestead and life in the 19th century Midwest.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
35 minutes ago
- The Guardian
I'm breaking free from watching TV on my laptop in bed. I'm going back to the big screen
Last week, a touching moment with a stranger reminded me why I love attending the movies. I had just emerged from the darkness of the Ritz Cinemas in Sydney's east, snot visibly dripping from my nose and my face blotchy-red. A Great Dane had done this to me, or, more specifically, the Great Dane in The Friend, a lovely adaptation of Sigrid Nunez's novel of the same name. Descending the stairs under the artificial lights of the cinema, I asked my friend if I 'looked insane'. She had spent the film gently rubbing me on the arm and at one point asking me if I was 'OK to continue watching' as I sobbed in dramatic gasps, overwhelmed by the story of a woman developing a bond with the dog of her late friend, both of them wrapped in grief. As my friend instructed me to get a tissue, a woman turned towards us, also sporting the blotchy-faced look, and told me she felt the same. We gushed at how much we had loved the movie and how prone we were to crying over dogs. As we shuffled into the street, I was moved by the feeling of connection we'd both felt – a shared experience between strangers. When this year's Sydney film festival draws to a close, I will have seen just under a dozen movies in a fortnight (thanks to a Flexipass that made it somewhat more affordable), dipping into stories from Ireland to Australia, France and Zambia. It's rare these days that I attend the cinema for new releases, so prone as I am to mindlessly scrolling through Netflix. I'm not the only one. According to Screen Australia, cinema attendance has been in steady decline for decades. At first, an upsurge in video hire was to blame. Then the proliferation of streaming services arrived, coupled with a Covid-induced shutdown. At its height, people would attend the cinema around 11 times a year in the early to mid-1990s. By 2023, it had dropped to just under five, and only 59% of Australians had visited the movies in the past year. Globally, it's a similar picture. According to the European Audiovisual Observatory, cinema ticket sales dropped 8.8% annually in 2024 and were still about 30% below pre-Covid levels. Amid a cost-of-living crisis, it may not come as a huge surprise. The average price of a cinema ticket rose from $13.60 in 2014 to $17.26 in 2024 according to Screen Australia, not to mention popcorn, drinks and transport. Straight-to-streaming has also become more common as the new iteration of direct-to-video, ushering hundreds of movies straight to the digital sphere without a run in the theatres. But attending the movies has forced me to break free of my regular weeknight ritual to watch random reality television on my laptop in bed while simultaneously scrolling through my iPhone. And it has reignited my love of cinema. There's something special about spending two hours in a dark room, with no distractions, while sharing your reactions to a movie in real-time with strangers. In horror movies, I have screamed in unison with hundreds of people and burst into laughter at unexpected jump-reveals. I have been moved by beautiful dialogue and cinematography in a way that is so easy to miss on a small screen without the temptation of my phone or the chatter of the outside world. I often wonder if I have become a zombie to streaming services, enticed to watch yet another bad sitcom because I was tempted by the last one, or forced on to the bandwagon of the latest viral television show because it's in the top 10 list. With film festivals, and cinema programs more broadly, I get to take time to read about directors I may not have heard of, to curate my own experience based on my preferences – not those of the great algorithm in the sky. In a world that has become so fractured and, at times, so lonely, I hope the magic of a plush red chair, the curtains unfurling and seeing the opening credits on a big screen is something we don't take for granted. Caitlin Cassidy is education reporter for Guardian Australia


Daily Mail
42 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Married At First Sight fan favourite Foxy JoJo doesn't look like this anymore! TV bride showcases stunning weight loss
Married At First Sight fan favourite Jo 'Foxy JoJo' McPharlin has stunned fans with her dramatic makeover, after losing 20kg four years ago. The former reality TV star, 47, has turned heads in glamorous photos shared to social media, in which she proudly and confidently flaunted her slender figure. One picture captured her beaming from ear-to-ear as she flaunted her well-toned curves to the camera while at a party. Another showed the upbeat star working up a sweat as she did star jumps at a scenic beachside location, providing insight into how she maintains her figure. Jo's dramatic change has rendered her nearly unrecognisable from her earlier days on Married At First Sight in 2018. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. However, she still had her trademark cheeky grin. Jo previously revealed on social media that she had been reluctant to detail her weight loss because of her lack of health and fitness qualifications. After she first lost weight, Jo was forced to deny undergoing weight loss surgery after being body-shamed and labelled 'too skinny' by Internet trolls. She said her weight loss was due to cutting out junk food and alcohol, keeping active, and using an electromagnetic muscle stimulation device. 'I am just a mum to two beautiful children. What works for me may not work for you. I have been dedicated, strict and everything mentally I wanted to be,' she said. 'That's how I'm achieving my goals. No surgery, no major story to it. It's been bloody hard work, mentally and emotionally. Every single day I want certain food, but I look at my two beautiful children and I want a better quality of life for everybody. 'I've stopped junk food, all of my carbs and the majority of alcohol. It's a lifestyle change. I've been blessed with losing weight, but maintaining it is the hard part. 'Everyone keeps saying, "Stop losing weight! Stop losing weight." I haven't lost weight in probably four months now. What I am doing is toning up,' she said in 2020. She added that the ketogenic diet had helped her shift 20kg and reach her goal weight, but she didn't promote this at the time because she's not a dietitian. The concept behind the 'keto diet' is to put one's body in a metabolic state of ketosis, which raises the ketone levels in the blood and causes the body to burn fat, not carbohydrates. Back in 2019, Jo said that cutting out energy drinks and junk food was a major factor behind her weight loss. 'All I've done different is meal plan,' she explained. 'I've stopped the junk food, stopped the soft drinks, stopped the Mother energy drinks,' she said. Jo, who went from a size 22 to a size 8, has said her health was a huge motivator to get fit and healthy. 'After seeing my own mum being sick, I didn't want that for myself. I wanted to make sure I was around for my kids, that I could run around with them and be the best mum to them that I could be,' she said. Jo was paired with Sean Donnelly on the show, but their union ended quickly after he failed to feel a spark with his new bride.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Australia's Next Top Model star Brooke Hogan criticised for 'tone deaf' paid post for luxury airline
Brooke Hogan has been called out by fans over an 'out of touch' social media post. The former Australia's Next Top Model star took to Instagram this week to share a paid partnership post for luxe airline Emirates. The post featured a series of images showing Brooke enjoying the benefits of flying business class with the airline. The carousel was titled: '7 honest things no one tells you about flying Emirates Business class.' She the went on to extoll the virtues of the premium service, including a chauffeur-driven car service to and from the airport. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. Other benefits identified by the entrepreneur included 'world class food', and 'exclusive designer Bulgari amenity kits'. 'There's free flowing wine,' Brooke wrote on one image. 'They have an extensive selection of complimentary drinks served throughout the flight including Moët & Chandon and a selection of six award-winning wines.' While the post was intended to elicit a sense of travel FOMO among her 619,000 followers, it appeared to have opposite effect. Many took to the comments to crtiticise Brooke for what they claimed was a 'tone deaf' post. 'Meanwhile the rest of the world has normal jobs and will never be able to afford this,' one jealous fan wrote. 'Such relatable content,' another quipped, while a third jumped in with: 'Looks so nice, dreamy and out of touch.' It didn't end there, either, with another offering: 'I mean you gotta get that bag girl, but this is a tough one to post and not cop some negative commentary.' The post featured a series of images showing Brooke enjoying the benefits of flying business class with the airline She the went on to extoll the virtues of the premium service, including a chauffeur-driven car service to and from the airport and 'free flowing wine' and the post elicited much criticism from followers Yet another offered: 'Glad you had a great experience, but everyone knows what business class looks like. 'It's definitely a case of "how do you know someone flew business class? Don't worry, they'll tell you."' It wasn't all negativity though, with many jumping in to the comments to admit their envy over the post. 'We flew Emirates business to Paris for our honeymoon last year. Wish I'd known about the chauffeur,' one follower wrote. 'It was so great, it has unfortunately ruined me for regular flights.' Another chimed in with: 'OMG can I trade places with you,' while a third summed up the sentiment of many with: 'This is incredible.' Daily Mail Australia has reached out to Brooke for comment. It wasn't all negativity though, with many jumping in to the comments to admit their envy over the post. Brooke is pictured with son Billy, one. Since appearing on Australia's Next Top Model in 2013, Brooke has taken her career across the globe while also being a regular fixture in both Sydney and Melbourne. She's worked with a variety of brands from Myer, Tommy Hilfiger, Seafolly and YSL while also working as a television presenter for Channel 7's lifestyle show, The Great Weekend. Brooke is also the founder of fashion and swimwear label Le Mon and the online Pilates platform Our Pilates. The entrepreneur welcomed her first child, Billy, with husband Myles Pitt back in 2023. The couple tied the knot in a lavish Mornington Peninsula wedding in 2022.