arts & life celebrities Ms. Gilbert Goes To Michigan Get the scoop on Melissa Gilbert — Brighton resident and political hopeful. Nate Bloom I Contributing Writer ctress Melissa Gilbert, 51, announced on Aug. 10 that she is running for U.S. House repre- sentative from the 8th District of Michigan. A Democrat, Gilbert seeks to unseat Republican incumbent Mike Bishop, who was first elected to the House in 2014. The district, which includes northern Oakland County and all of Ingham and Livingston coun- ties, leans Republican and Gilbert has to fight an uphill race: The 8th has not elected a Democrat since current U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow gave up the seat in 2001. Since then, redistricting has put more Republican voters in the district. It may seem surprising that a California actress, best known for her youthful role as Laura Ingalls Wilder in the long- A running family western, Little House on the Prairie, is now living in Michigan and running for Congress. However, there is almost nothing usual about Gilbert's life history, including her Jewish background. Gilbert was born in Los Angeles to working-class, non- Jewish parents. The couple had recently split from their respec- tive spouses and took children from each marriage into their new home. They couldn't afford another child and Melissa was put up for adoption. The infant was adopted right after birth, in 1964, by Barbara Crane Gilbert, now 77, and her then-husband, actor Paul Gilbert. Barbara, who is Jewish, is the daughter of Harry "Hesch" Crane (1914-1999), a former Borscht Belt come- dian who became a top com- edy writer and co-created The Honeymooners. Barbara was an aspiring actress when she broke an engagement to Don Rickles and, in 1962, married Paul Gilbert, an Irish-American, much-married actor who was 20 years her senior. It was natural, in the family's showbiz milieu, for Barbara to try and get Melissa into show- biz, and Melissa did a lot of commercials before auditioning for Little House in 1974. Melissa writes in her 2009 autobiography, A Prairie Tale, that her grandfather Harry, who she was close to, was then riding high as the chief writer for The Dean Martin Show, and he probably made some calls before Melissa's audition — tell- ing folks "to treat my grand- daughter right." Melissa got the part and the show was a smash hit, running until 1983. In her "spare time," Melissa was nominated for an Emmy in 1979 for playing Helen Keller in a TV version of The Miracle Worker; she also played Anne Frank in a 1980 TV version of The Diary of Anne Frank. In Prairie Tale, Melissa says that while her family celebrated some Jewish holidays, she had no formal religious training. She calls herself "Jew-ISH" in the book because she dis- covered, as an adult, that her mother never had her formally converted to Judaism as an infant or small child. Melissa's parents split up in 1972 and Barbara married attorney Harold Abeles in 1974; their biological daughter, Sara, was born in 1975. Born Sara Abeles, she took the stage name Sara Gilbert when she followed her half-sister, Melissa, into acting. Gilbert's acting career since Little House ended fared bet- ter than most tween-age stars, but it was largely limited to TV GILBERT on page 63 August 27 • 2015 59