Shaun Cassidy reflects on his father Jack’s struggles with ego and family fame, offering a candid look at their complex relationship.
Key Takeaways
- Shaun Cassidy discusses his father Jack’s struggles with ego and family fame.
- Jack Cassidy, a Tony Award-winning actor, had a complicated relationship with his family’s success.
- Shaun reflects on the impact of his father’s early death and their strained relationship.
Shaun Cassidy, the legendary teen idol of the 1970s, has opened up about his complex relationship with his father, Jack Cassidy, in a recent podcast interview. Known for his roles on television and hit songs like “Do You Believe in Magic” and “That’s Rock ‘n’ Roll,” Shaun hailed from a family deeply rooted in the entertainment industry. His mother, Shirley Jones, is an Oscar-winning actress, and his half-brother, David Cassidy, was a fellow teen idol famous for The Partridge Family.
In an interview on the podcast Nostalgia Tonight With Joe Sibia, Shaun described his father as a “wildly talented man” who was a Tony Award-winner on Broadway, an actor, singer, and Emmy-nominee in TV. However, Jack struggled with the success of his wife and sons, particularly David, who became a global sensation. Shaun noted that his father had a “big ego” and a “core insecurity” that made it difficult for him to celebrate the achievements of his family members.
“But he had taken a backseat to my mother,” Shaun said. “My mother was an Academy Award winner and a very big movie star before The Partridge Family. And then along comes David. And David becomes kind of the biggest thing in the world for a while. And he had a hard time with it.”
Shaun, now 67, reflected on his father’s shortcomings, saying, “A lot of parents would have been very proud of their son or their wife, for that matter. But, you know, my father had a big ego. And I think, like a lot of performers had a sort of core insecurity that he was looking for an audience to fill.”
Shaun also discussed the impact of his father’s early death in an apartment fire in 1976, when Jack was just 49. He shared that losing his father at a young age allowed him to “write the script of how your life with that person would have been, had they lived.”
“I’d like to just write the story that I would have gotten closer with my dad, he would have been proud of me,” Shaun said.
In a previous interview with People, Shaun described his father as a bit of a “phony” publicly, noting that he and his siblings were baffled by the British accent Jack used in interviews. “He basically invented this public persona with an accent that didn’t exist in any country ever,” Shaun said.
Despite their strained relationship, Shaun acknowledged the gifts he received from his father. “He was not a good father — and I don’t say that with disrespect. I just say it with objectivity. And yet I wouldn’t have traded him for the world. I got so many gifts from him, so many,” he said.
For more insights into the lives of entertainment icons and their families, stay tuned to onlytrustedinfo.com, your definitive source for the fastest, most authoritative analysis in entertainment news.