The Shaun Johnston Secret

The role that taught him how to grow older
Shaun Johnston Reflects on Playing Jack for 20 Years on HeartlandShaun Johnston - Meet Heartland's Grandpa Jack Bartlett

Shaun Johnston didn’t need a script when his horse died on screen. When the pages for the ninth season of Heartland hit his desk, he didn't scribble notes or rehearse a tearful monologue. He just let out a breath. Most actors treat a character's grief like a technical exercise in crying. Johnston knew that saying goodbye to Paint wasn't about acting. It was about being real.

"Film is a permanent record of every mistake you ever make, which is why it's terrifying compared to the stage."

Life Before the Heartland Ranch

Before he played the wise old man of an Alberta ranch, Johnston was a twenty-year-old kid in a 1973 Cutlass Supreme, escaping a future in accounting. He made sixty dollars an hour, stood six-foot-three, and modeled on runways in Toronto.

It’s funny to picture if you've only seen him in jeans and a cowboy hat. Imagine the man who represents Canadian country life walking under strobe lights for high fashion. Odd.

Shaun Johnston as Jack Bartlett wearing cowboy hat on Heartland ranch set
Jack and Paint,The Actor Fans Call Family

He still talks about theater with the respect most men have for their first car or a championship win. For him, the stage is safe because a messed-up line disappears when the curtain falls. Television is different. It's permanent. Every bad choice and every awkward pause is stuck in the digital world forever. That’s probably why he stopped trying to control the story and started trusting quiet moments.

Playing Jack Bartlett for over ten years would turn most actors into a caricature of a grumpy old man. Johnston, however, uses the role to explore aging. He ignores Hollywood's fixation on youth. He's letting his hair go grey. He plays hockey, strums a guitar, and performs for crowds in rural Alberta without a safety net.

Behind-the-scenes photo of Shaun Johnston with horse on Heartland television series
Shaun and Amber on Heartland

The worry about the next season used to bother him. Actors constantly fear the phone will stop ringing. Johnston eventually stopped letting that kind of stress get to him.
He knew the show would go on, or it wouldn't. Either way, he'd found his pace. He's steady. He's flawed. Best of all, he's stopped trying to be perfect.

Rating: 4.2 (13 votes)
  1. Sandy Spicer says:

    I love heartland my youngest grandson love it to he love grandpa Jack Shaun has really made the part of Grandpa Jack come to life it would be so awesome to take my grandson to meet him someday and i also would live to meet him i cant picture him not being Grandpa Jack he is an amazing actor they pick the best man for the part he playes just gotta love Shaun Johnston in his roll to meet him sometime would be a dream come true

  2. Terrie St. John says:

    I love all the characters the girls But one is a very good in the all the shows he plays. Y you feel everything he goes thru so much love and compassion It is Shaun Johnson. I love him dearly

  3. Pamela Duffy says:

    I love watching Heartland and the actors that make it real! Like Ty you took him off and Jack now you're talking of removing him?? Jack and Amy make the show! Take them away the show loses interest. I never watched a Canadian show before Heartland! I will be lost without Heartland!

  4. Terry Hartwig says:

    Good to know how Jack ticks

  5. Alan Mac gowan says:

    Really used to like the show but since Amy
    Found all the new lover it just turns me off.
    An I know it’s only show but I guess that’s not the way I was brought up I don’t watch it any longer..

  6. Duane Ricks says:

    Shaun Johnson is Jack and nobody else could play him better!

  7. tammy.beel@icloud.com says:

    I hope that you are doing good I will never forget you and one day I will be with you

Leave a Reply to Pamela Duffy Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Your score: Useful

Go up