LOS ANGELES
Paul Bunyan and the Jolly Green Giant may be the rare mythical characters that call Minnesota home, but don't be surprised if Sleeping Beauty wakes up someday in Uptown Minneapolis.
If the princess and her pals make the move to the Midwest, it'll be due to glowing reviews from their bosses at "Once Upon a Time," which returns Friday for its seventh season.
The show's Edina-bred co-creator, Edward Kitsis, and his writing partner Adam Horowitz, who married a Roseville native on the University of Minnesota campus, sprinkle Minnesota references throughout their hit drama, in which fairy-tale favorites adjust to a modern-day world.
"I've lived in Los Angeles for 24 years, but I still refer to Minneapolis as home," said Kitsis, who gets back to the Twin Cities two or three times a year, listens to the Replacements while he's writing and keeps a poster of the state hanging in his office. "I'm still rooting for the Vikings."
Kitsis and Horowitz, who met as students at the University of Wisconsin, attempted to launch their Hollywood career in 1995 with a script about a New Yorker who relocates to Minnesota. The story didn't sell, but the pair soon found themselves working for teen dramas such as "Popular," "Felicity" and "One Tree Hill." Their reputation led them to the grown-up assignment of writing for "Lost," where they specialized in dialogue for Sawyer and Hurley and wound up as executive producers for the final two seasons.
Based on their work for the landmark series, including penning the penultimate episode, the two sold ABC on "Once Upon a Time," a high-concept drama in which Emma Swan (Jennifer Morrison), the daughter of Prince Charming and Snow White, is charged with breaking a curse that transported storybook favorites from the Enchanted Forest to the not-so-enchanted "real world," represented by the fictional town of Storybrooke, Maine.
The series has never finished in the top 20, but it has attracted fans tired of predictable procedurals and trash-talking reality shows.