Allison Balson came into the public eye the way a lot of child actors did in the late ’70s and early ’80s—quietly, steadily, with a face that casting directors remembered even when they couldn’t quite place where they’d seen her before. Before Little House on the Prairie made her a household name, she’d already been popping up across syndicated television like a spark—commercials, guest roles, after-school specials, all those small stepping stones that build a childhood career one call sheet at a time.
She did ads for Coca-Cola, M&M’s, KFC, Vivitar, Minute Maid—those sunny, cheerful 30-second myths about American life. Then came the TV spots: Quincy, CHiPs, and the syndicated sitcom The Life and Times of Eddie Roberts, where she played Chrissy Roberts. Nothing earth-shaking, but enough to let producers know she could carry a scene without sinking under the glare of studio lighting.
Then came Nancy Oleson.
In 1981, Allison Balson walked into Little House on the Prairie—a show already deep into its cultural moment—and became Nancy, the adopted daughter of Harriet and Nels Oleson. The writers brought Nancy in as a kind of spiritual successor to Nellie Oleson: bratty, manipulative, dramatic, the kind of kid who could curdle milk with a single glare. And Allison? She stepped into the role with relish, giving Nancy the kind of spiky edge that made viewers boo at the screen and remember her decades later.
It’s no small feat to join a beloved series that late in its run and still make yourself impossible to forget. But she did. From 1981 through 1983—both on Little House and its reworked continuation Little House: A New Beginning—she played the kind of villainous child only a frontier town could produce: petty, loud, wounded in ways she didn’t know how to name, and ready to make everyone else’s life hell because of it.
Nancy Oleson was the bad seed audiences loved to hate. Allison Balson made her human. That’s the difference between a caricature and a character—one you boo, the other you remember.
After the prairie dust settled, she continued acting, but she didn’t chain herself to the nostalgia of her childhood role. She turned up in the thriller The Hearse (1980), the family-friendly Looker (1981), the fantasy Legend of the White Horse(1987), and the crime drama Best Seller, playing Holly Meechum alongside James Woods and Brian Dennehy. Later, decades into her adult life, she appeared in the indie feature Broken Blood (2013), playing Mary, a role that earned her a Best Supporting Actress nomination—proof that some careers don’t end, they shift shapes.
But Allison wasn’t content with just one lane. She had a voice—literally—and a taste for music. She turned that into Music Scene Live, a syndicated radio show she created, hosted, and produced. The format was simple but ambitious: musicians performing original work live in front of an audience, the kind of thing that cuts through studio polish and gets down to the pulse beneath the song. Over three years and more than 250 artists, she built a space where music wasn’t just played—it was talked about, wrestled with, shared.
And she didn’t leave the performing arts behind. She continued acting in television and film, kept writing and recording music, and pulled her creative life in multiple directions at once. She began working on her third solo album, the work of an artist who follows her own rhythm, not the one Hollywood hands her. When Little House on the Prairie hit its 50th anniversary, she released the single “My Friend”—a nod to the place that made her recognizable, but filtered through decades of life lived far outside Walnut Grove.
Most former child actors fade into footnotes or disappear entirely. Not Allison Balson. She grew into adulthood on her own terms, moving between acting, songwriting, performing, and producing like someone who never believed she had to choose just one creative identity.
She will always be Nancy Oleson to the fans—and that’s fine. But the real story is that she was more than Nancy, long before and long after. She was one of those rare performers who managed to take an early, defining role and build a life that didn’t depend on it.
She didn’t just survive child stardom. She turned it into a foundation. And then she kept building.

