New āLittle House on the Prairieā creator breaks down āincredible dangerā of shooting premiereās river forge (exclusive)
New āLittle House on the Prairieā creator breaks down āincredible dangerā of shooting premiereās river forge (exclusive)

Ryan ColemanThu, July 9, 2026 at 1:00 PM UTC
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Crosby Fitzgerald and Luke Bracey on āLittle House on the PrairieāCredit: NetflixKey Points -
Rebecca Sonnenshine, the creator of Netflixās new Little House on the Prairie adaptation, takes EW inside the premiere episodeās dramatic river forge scene.
āItās a very complicated sequence, in terms of keeping everybody safe, the horse safe, our actors safe, and conveying this incredible danger, which is symbolic of a point of no return,ā she says.
Shooting the perilous scene for the fresh adaptation of Laura Ingalls Wilderās classic books utilized real horses, VFX work, location shoots, and a water tank.
This post contains spoilers for Little House on the Prairie.
āThe Ingalls are coming, hurrah, hurrah! The Ingalls are coming to Kansas now!ā
These joyous lines of song help kick off Netflixās fresh new take on Laura Ingalls Wilderās classic novels of pioneer girlhood, Little House on the Prairie.
Helmed by The Boys producer and The Housemaid screenwriter Rebecca Sonnenshine, the new series diverges in significant ways from the classic TV drama, which ran on NBC from 1974 to 1983. The Netflix production adapts the books only, not the original show. But there are certain scenes so central to little Lauraās journey that they demanded inclusion on both shows.
Case in point: The Ingalls familyās perilous river forge as they make their way from the Wisconsin woods to the open prairies of Kansas. Alice Halsey and Skywalker Hughes, who play sisters Laura and Mary Ingalls, lull viewers of the new seriesā premiere into a deceptive calm with their folksy balladeering. But within minutes of the episodeās start, the Ingalls come face to face with their first big hurtle en route to that little house ā and it isnāt easily cleared.
Sonnenshine sat down with Entertainment Weekly ahead of Thursdayās Little House on the Prairie premiere to break down what went into keeping everyone safe ā horses, dogs, and people alike āwhen shooting such a challenging scene.

Alice Halsey and Luke Bracey shooting a scene for āLittle House on the Prairieā
āThat was an incredible mixture of all sorts of things ā water work, horses, incredible performances in a challenging situation,ā she says. āOur director, Sarah Adina Smith (Birds of Paradise, Busterās Mal Heart), she did such a great job of conceiving all of that, and really, I think itās important to have a really good performances while youāre doing all that. So that is really what we were trying to focus on.ā
Though packed with action, the first five minutes of Little House on the Prairie are indeed driven by the core castās impassioned performances. Luke Bracey (Elvis) steps confidently into the massive shoes left by Michael Landon, who played Charles āPaā Ingalls on the original series, in addition to directing many episodes and steering the show creatively. Crosby Fitzgerald takes over as Caroline āMaā Ingalls from O.G. star Karen Grassle, while Halsey and Hughesā Laura and Mary are roles made famous by Melissa Gilbert and Melissa Sue Anderson, respectively.
But Smithās direction of the pilotās opening scenes also drives home the seriesā tone, which turns on a dime between pastoral quietude and thrilling action. Laura and Mary, in fact, sing their song as the family traverses a cliffside overlooking the very river that moments later theyāre forced to cross.
āItās a very complicated sequence, in terms of keeping everybody safe, the horse safe, our actors safe, and conveying this incredible danger, which is symbolic of a point of no return, right?ā Sonnenshine explains. āOnce they get past that river, they canāt go back. Can you imagine crossing that again?ā
The Ingalls are thoroughly disabused of any notion they might turn back to Wisconsin when the river forge nearly ends in disaster. As in the the original Little House pilot, Laura sweetly asks Pa if the family dog, Jack, can cross with the family ensconced in the safety of their covered wagon, rather than braving it alone like the horses before the cart. In both shows he assents, and in both, Jack leaps out of the wagon mid-crossing.
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In the new Little House, the wagon buckles and dips, as Pa finds himself submerged up to his chin in coursing water. A wheel is caught on a heavy, submerged stone, and the horses begin to panic when they get stuck because of it. A blink-and-youāll-miss it shot of Caroline holding fast the reins shows the effort has left her palms bloody. The girls scream, Jack floats down river, and viewers ask themselves, āHow did they shoot this safely?ā

Luke Bracey and Alice Halsey prepare to forge the river as Pa and Laura Ingalls on āLittle House on the Prairieā
āIt was a super, super complicated sequence. But it all came together,ā Sonnenshine says. āWe had an incredible VFX team, and incredible, special effects team, and we just love everybody we work with so much.ā
When pressed, Sonnenshine breaks down the specifics of the scene which is rendered in such a way that it appears entirely shot on location.
āItās shot in a tank. Everything is separate because you canāt have horses with actors in the same spots,ā she explains. āSo everything is shot in a giant tank and then other things are shot on location. Then itās all kind of melded together into this really fun and exciting sequence that also has an incredible soundtrack. That really helps sell it.ā
The Ingalls eventually make it to the other bank, and then to their new home in Kansas. And ā spoiler alert to spare readers who havenāt seen the premiere a fretful visit to doesthedogdie.com ā Jack survives, reuniting with the family as they build their little house.

The Ingalls family (Skywalker Hughes, Crosby Fitzgerald, Alice Halsey, Luke Bracey) after surviving the river forge on āLittle House on the Prairieā
Entertainment Weekly previewed Sonnenshineās new vision of the out West classics back in May.
She cautioned that super-fans of the original series shouldnāt expect a beat-for-beat remake. Her Little House on the Prairie is squarely focused on Ingalls Wilderās coming-of-age tales, which published between 1872 and 1894.
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That said, āthe spirit of the [original] show is going to overlap. Weāre also using a little bit of the history of Laura Ingalls Wilderās real life, which the show did as well,ā Sonnenshine explains. āAnd there are things we incorporated in the show that are from outside the books, that were part of her life, or a part of history at that time.ā
Ingalls Wilderās approach to Little House on the Prairie was all about āfinding a way to expand on some of those stories and some of those characters to create something that felt very much like modern television,ā Sonnenshine says.
Little House on the Prairie is currently streaming in its entirety on Netflix.
on Entertainment Weekly
Source: āAOL Entertainmentā