Shaun Cassidy
Shaun Paul Cassidy (born September 27, 1958) is an American singer, actor, writer, and producer best known as a teen idol during the late 1970s for his pop music hits and starring role in the television series The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries.[1][2] Born in Los Angeles, California, Cassidy grew up in a show business family as the son of Tony Award-winning actor and singer Jack Cassidy and Academy Award-winning actress Shirley Jones, making him the half-brother of fellow teen idol and The Partridge Family star David Cassidy.[1][2][3] Cassidy signed with Warner Bros. Records while still in high school and launched his music career with the 1976 single "Morning Girl," which reached the Top 20 on European charts, followed by his U.S. breakthrough in 1977 with the gold-certified cover "Da Doo Ron Ron," which peaked at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.[2][3] His self-titled debut album that year went platinum, and he released three multi-platinum albums between 1977 and 1979, featuring additional Top 10 hits like "That's Rock 'n' Roll" (No. 3 in 1977), "Hey Deanie" (No. 7 in 1977), and "Do You Believe in Magic" (No. 22 in 1978), earning a Grammy nomination for Best New Artist.[2][3] He performed to massive audiences at venues such as Madison Square Garden and the Houston Astrodome, with his last major tour in 1980, before returning to the stage in 2023 for sold-out shows at 54 Below in New York. In recent years, he has resumed performing with his "The Road to Us" tour across North America (as of 2025).[2] In acting, Cassidy co-starred as Joe Hardy in ABC's The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries from 1977 to 1979 alongside Parker Stevenson, appearing in 46 episodes, and later starred as Mickey Johnstone in the Broadway production of Blood Brothers from 1993 to 1995.[2][3] Transitioning to writing and producing in the 1990s, Cassidy created his first television pilot, American Gothic (1995–1996), which The New York Times praised as "the most original new show of the season," and went on to produce acclaimed series including Roar (1997), The Agency (2001–2003), Cover Me: Based on the True Life of an FBI Family (2000–2001), Invasion (2005–2006), Cold Case (2003–2010), Emerald City (2017), and New Amsterdam (2018–2023), the latter running for five seasons on NBC and Netflix.[2]Early life
Family background
Shaun Paul Cassidy was born on September 27, 1958, in Los Angeles, California, to actress Shirley Jones and actor Jack Cassidy.[4] His mother, Shirley Jones, was an Academy Award-winning performer who gained prominence for her leading role in the musical film Oklahoma! (1955) and later starred as the matriarch in the television series The Partridge Family (1970–1974).[5] His father, Jack Cassidy, was a celebrated Broadway actor who won a Tony Award for his featured role in the musical She Loves Me (1963) and appeared in numerous stage productions and films throughout his career.[6] Cassidy grew up with a half-brother, David Cassidy, from his father's previous marriage to actress Evelyn Ward, as well as two full brothers, Patrick and Ryan, all of whom were also drawn into the entertainment industry.[7] The family resided in a Hollywood milieu, where the parents' high-profile careers provided Shaun with early immersion in show business, including frequent exposure to performers, sets, and industry events that shaped his formative years.[8] Shaun's parents had married in 1956, but their union dissolved amid personal challenges, culminating in a divorce in 1975.[9] This separation, followed closely by Jack Cassidy's tragic death in a December 12, 1976, apartment fire in West Hollywood—caused by a lit cigarette—profoundly influenced family dynamics, fostering a sense of loss and complicating relationships among the siblings during their adolescence.[10][11]Education
Shaun Cassidy attended the Solebury School, a boarding school in Solebury Township, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, during his early teenage years.[12] There, he developed an early interest in music by jamming with older fellow students on weekends and attempting to form a band, including collaborations with musicians like Ivan Kral, who later became a notable figure in the punk scene.[12] His exposure to New York's emerging punk music culture during this period further fueled his passion for performing arts.[12] Cassidy later transferred to Beverly Hills High School in California, where he graduated in 1976.[13] Growing up in an entertainment family—with his father, Jack Cassidy, a Tony Award-winning actor and singer, and his mother, Shirley Jones, an Academy Award-winning actress—provided informal mentorship and opportunities that nurtured his interests in acting and music from a young age.[14] He formed his first band at age 11 and began performing publicly shortly thereafter, honing skills that aligned with his school's emphasis on creative expression.[15] Following high school, Cassidy pursued no formal higher education, instead transitioning directly into a professional career in the entertainment industry.[16]Career
Music career
Shaun Cassidy signed with Warner Bros. Records in 1976 at the age of 17 while still attending high school.[2] His self-titled debut album, Shaun Cassidy, was released in 1977 and achieved multi-platinum status, featuring a cover of the Crystals' "Da Doo Ron Ron" that reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100.[2][17] Follow-up singles from the album included "That's Rock 'n' Roll," which peaked at number three on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1977, and "Hey Deanie," which reached number seven later that year.[18] Subsequent releases included the live album Shaun Cassidy Live in 1978, followed by the studio albums Under Wraps in 1978 and Wasp in 1980, the latter incorporating more original material produced by Todd Rundgren.[2][19][20][21] Throughout the late 1970s, Cassidy built a devoted teen fanbase through extensive concert tours, performing at large venues such as Madison Square Garden and culminating in a 1980 show at the Houston Astrodome that drew 55,000 attendees.[2][22] In 1980, at age 22, Cassidy retired from music to pursue acting and writing, citing frustrations with Warner Bros.' insistence on commercially oriented disco-influenced records over his preferred new wave direction, which limited his creative control following the underperformance of Wasp.[23]Acting career
Cassidy began his acting career with a television movie debut in The Night That Panicked America, a 1975 ABC drama depicting the 1938 radio broadcast of War of the Worlds, where he played one of the young characters affected by the panic. His breakthrough came in 1977 when he was cast as Joe Hardy in the ABC series The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries, a role that capitalized on his rising fame as a teen idol from his music career and ran for two seasons until 1979, showcasing his youthful charm in mystery-solving adventures alongside co-star Parker Stevenson.[24] In the 1980s, Cassidy transitioned to more mature characters, appearing in the short-lived ABC series Breaking Away (1980–1981) as Mike, a college student navigating post-high school life, inspired by the 1979 film of the same name. He also took on guest roles in popular TV shows, including an episode of Murder, She Wrote in 1984 as a young man entangled in a murder investigation, and Alfred Hitchcock Presents in 1985, where he portrayed a shoe salesman in the segment "If the Shoe Fits." Further guest appearances included two episodes of Matlock in 1988 as Craig Gentry, a suspect in a legal drama, and a recurring role on the soap opera General Hospital in 1987 as Teddy Holmes. His film work during this period featured Just the Way You Are (1984), a romantic comedy in which he played a musician with a hearing impairment traveling to the Alps, and Once Upon a Texas Train (1988), a Western TV movie opposite Willie Nelson and Richard Widmark, where he depicted a young outlaw.[25] Cassidy's stage career gained prominence with his Broadway debut in the musical Blood Brothers (1993–1995), where he starred as Eddie Johnstone opposite his half-brother David Cassidy as Mickey, in Willy Russell's tale of separated twins divided by class; the production, which ran for 840 performances, received praise for the siblings' chemistry and Cassidy's dramatic depth beyond his teen idol image.[26] Additional film roles included the TV movie Roots: The Gift (1988), a prequel to the Roots miniseries in which he appeared as a character in the antebellum South. By the early 1990s, Cassidy had largely shifted focus from acting to producing and writing, though his earlier performances established him as a versatile performer capable of evolving from adolescent leads to adult ensemble parts.Producing and writing career
Cassidy transitioned to television producing and writing in the mid-1990s, creating his first series, the supernatural drama American Gothic, which aired on CBS from 1995 to 1996.[27] As creator and executive producer, he crafted a story set in a Southern town dominated by a malevolent sheriff, blending horror and moral allegory to explore themes of good versus evil.[28] The series earned five Saturn Award nominations in 1996, including for Best Genre Television Series, praised for its atmospheric tension and innovative storytelling.[29] In 1997, Cassidy created and served as executive producer for Roar, a fantasy adventure series on Fox starring Heath Ledger as a young warrior fighting Roman invaders in ancient Ireland.[30] He wrote multiple episodes, emphasizing mythological elements and high-stakes battles in a genre-bending narrative that mixed historical drama with supernatural lore.[31] This project marked his early foray into producing ambitious, effects-driven television. Cassidy continued as executive producer on several series, including The Agency (2001–2003) on CBS, a drama about CIA operatives; Cover Me: Based on the True Life of an FBI Family (2000–2001) on FX, blending family dynamics with undercover operations; the sci-fi thriller Invasion (2005–2006) on ABC, where he oversaw a plot involving alien-like entities infiltrating a Florida community after a hurricane; Cold Case (2003–2010) on CBS, a procedural focusing on unsolved crimes; the crime procedural The Evidence (2006) on ABC, focusing on a team's use of forensic and circumstantial clues to solve cases; Emerald City (2017) on NBC, a dark fantasy reimagining of The Wizard of Oz; and the family comedy Ruby & The Rockits (2009) on ABC, a semi-autobiographical series co-created with his brothers about a faded rock star raising his teenage daughter.[28][32][33] From 2018 to 2023, Cassidy was an executive producer and writer on NBC's long-running medical drama New Amsterdam, contributing to its 89-episode run by developing character-driven stories centered on hospital reforms and ethical dilemmas in healthcare.[34] His writing credits span pilots and episodes across these projects, often infusing genre-bending elements like suspense and the supernatural into dramatic frameworks, drawing subtly from his acting background to shape authentic character arcs.[35]Recent activities
In 2020, amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Shaun Cassidy launched The Magic of a Midnight Sky, a self-penned music and storytelling show that toured nationwide through 2024, drawing sold-out crowds at venues across the United States.[36][37] During the same period, Cassidy debuted My First Crush, a collection of fine wines developed in collaboration with winemaker Steve Clifton, with proceeds benefiting the No Kid Hungry charity to address child hunger exacerbated by the pandemic.[38][39] The project expanded in October 2023 with the official launch of "The Crush Club," an exclusive wine club offering members access to new releases, limited-edition varietals, and special events while continuing to support the charity.[40][41] Cassidy marked a significant return to live music in September 2025 with An Evening With Shaun Cassidy at the GRAMMY Museum in Los Angeles, where he previewed new material and discussed his career trajectory in conversation with Billboard Executive Editor Melinda Newman.[42][43] Later that month, he kicked off his most ambitious project yet: the 50-city The Road to Us North American tour, beginning September 13 at Nashville's Grand Ole Opry and concluding in March 2026, featuring a mix of his 1970s hits like "Da Doo Ron Ron," newly written songs such as the reflective "The Last Song" and the title track "My First Crush," and personal anecdotes delivered with a full band.[44][45][46] As of 2025, Cassidy continues to balance his touring commitments with television development, actively writing multiple pilots under an exclusive deal with NBCUniversal, including scripts focused on dramatic narratives.[47][48] In interviews that year, Cassidy reflected on his professional evolution, describing the tour as an invigorating late-career milestone that reconnects him with fans while allowing space for ongoing creative pursuits in music and media.[49][48]Personal life
Marriages and children
Shaun Cassidy has been married three times. His first marriage was to model and former Playboy Playmate Ann Pennington on December 1, 1979; they divorced in 1993 and had two children together: daughter Caitlin Ann Cassidy, born in 1981, and son Jacob "Jake" Cassidy, born in 1985, who later pursued a career as an actor.[14][50] His second marriage was to actress Susan Diol on May 7, 1995; they divorced on March 1, 2003, and had one daughter, Juliet Cassidy, born in 1998.[14][50] Cassidy married television producer Tracey Lynne Turner on August 28, 2004; the couple remains together and has four children: son Caleb Turner Cassidy, born March 3, 2005; son Roan Howard Cassidy, born September 23, 2006;[14] daughter Lila Tracey Cassidy, born in December 2008;[13] and daughter Mairin Cassidy, born in 2011.[14][7] In total, Cassidy is the father of seven children from his three marriages, and he has maintained a low public profile regarding their lives, emphasizing family privacy and avoiding any major scandals or controversies in media reports.[2][51] Since 2011, Cassidy and his family have resided in the wine country of Santa Barbara County, California.[2][49]Family relationships and later years
Shaun Cassidy maintains a close and supportive relationship with his mother, Shirley Jones, born on March 31, 1934, who turned 91 in 2025.[52] Living just five minutes away from her in the Santa Ynez Valley of Santa Barbara County since 2011, Cassidy provides ongoing caregiving, describing it as a rewarding gift that enriches his life.[49] Jones remains in good health overall, with only minor memory issues, and her enduring positivity and gracious demeanor continue to influence Cassidy profoundly.[48] He has publicly celebrated her milestones, such as taking her out for lunch on her 91st birthday and sharing a photo of her with birthday cake, highlighting her role as a stabilizing force in his life.[52] Cassidy credits Jones with modeling effective ways to navigate fame, providing emotional support that helped him buy his first house at age 18 and offering lessons in resilience that shaped his perspective.[49] Cassidy has reflected deeply on the death of his half-brother, David Cassidy, who passed away on November 21, 2017, at age 67 from liver and kidney failure stemming from long-term alcoholism.[53] He described watching David's battles with addiction as "terribly hard" and "painful," viewing it as a cautionary tale of fame's destructive potential.[54] Unlike Shaun, who treated his teen stardom as a temporary "lottery win" to pivot into writing and producing, David resented the pressures of celebrity, struggling with his identity after rejecting the wholesome "Keith Partridge" image in favor of a edgier persona akin to Jimi Hendrix.[48] This contrast was evident in David's difficulty celebrating Shaun's success, though they shared a meaningful bond, including co-starring in the 1993 Broadway production of Blood Brothers, which Cassidy recalls as cathartic.[49] Shaun misses David as the only family member who truly understood the unique burdens of their shared experiences in the spotlight.[49] Cassidy shares strong familial bonds with his full brothers, Patrick and Ryan Cassidy, rooted in their common upbringing as sons of Jack Cassidy and Shirley Jones in a show business household.[7] The brothers have made occasional joint appearances, such as Shaun and Patrick performing together alongside their mother in productions like The Music Man.[7] These ties, along with those to his extended family, have served as a grounding force for Shaun after his days of teen fame, allowing him to prioritize a stable life in Santa Barbara County near relatives and fulfill a vision of family unity that his father never achieved.[49] As of 2025, Cassidy is considering writing a memoir to explore these family dynamics honestly, drawing inspiration from works like Patti Smith's Just Kids and focusing on the unique stories of his parents, David, and his brothers.[49] His seven children, including those from prior marriages, further extend this sense of continuity and legacy within the family.[48]Works
Discography
Shaun Cassidy's discography primarily consists of pop and rock recordings released during the late 1970s, when he achieved teen idol status, followed by a long hiatus from new material until a 2025 single release tied to his touring comeback. His early work, produced under Warner Bros. and Curb Records, featured cover songs and original tracks that capitalized on his vocal style and the era's bubblegum pop trends. No new studio albums were issued between 1980 and 2025, though several compilations and reissues appeared in the intervening decades.[1][55]Studio albums
Cassidy released five studio albums between 1976 and 1980, with the first two achieving significant commercial success on the Billboard 200 chart.| Album | Release year | Label | Peak chart position (US Billboard 200) | Certifications |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shaun Cassidy | 1977 | Warner Bros./Curb | 3 | Platinum (US), 2× Platinum (Canada) |
| Born Late | 1977 | Warner Bros./Curb | 6 | Platinum (US) |
| Under Wraps | 1978 | Warner Bros./Curb | 33 | Platinum (US) |
| Room Service | 1979 | Warner Bros./Curb | Did not chart | - |
| Wasp | 1980 | Warner Bros. | Did not chart | - |
Live albums
Cassidy issued one live recording during his active music period.| Album | Release year | Label | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| That's Rock 'n' Roll Live | 1979 | Warner Bros. | Captures performances from his 1979 concert tour, including hits like "Da Doo Ron Ron" and covers of rock standards. |
Compilation albums
Post-1980 compilations focused on his hits, with reissues of earlier albums appearing in digital formats on platforms like Spotify and Apple Music starting in the 2000s.| Album | Release year | Label | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Greatest Hits | 1991 | Curb | Collects tracks from all five studio albums, including "Hey Deanie" and "Do You Believe in Magic"; reissued on CD in 1992. |
Singles
Cassidy's singles, mostly from his debut era, produced several Top 10 hits on the Billboard Hot 100, emphasizing upbeat covers of 1960s classics.| Single | Release year | Album | Peak chart position (US Billboard Hot 100) | Certifications |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| "Da Doo Ron Ron" | 1977 | Shaun Cassidy | 1 | Gold (US) |
| "That's Rock 'n' Roll" | 1977 | Shaun Cassidy | 3 | Gold (US) |
| "Hey Deanie" | 1977 | Born Late | 7 | - |
| "Do You Believe in Magic" | 1978 | Born Late | 31 | - |
| "Our Night" | 1978 | Under Wraps | 80 | - |
Filmography
Shaun Cassidy began his acting career in the mid-1970s, leveraging his early fame as a teen idol to secure lead roles in television series and movies. His acting credits span TV series, telefilms, guest spots on popular shows, and stage work, primarily in the late 1970s through the 1990s. Below is a chronological listing of his key acting roles.| Year | Title | Role | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1977–1979 | The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries | Joe Hardy | TV series (lead) | Co-starred with Parker Stevenson as the Hardy brothers solving mysteries.[66] |
| 1979 | Like Normal People | Roger Meyers | TV movie | Portrayed a young man with intellectual disabilities in this ABC drama opposite Linda Purl.[66] |
| 1980–1981 | Breaking Away | Dave Stoller | TV series (lead) | Prequel to the 1979 film, playing an Italian-obsessed teen in Bloomington, Indiana.[67] |
| 1987 | Murder, She Wrote (Season 3, Episode 14: "Murder in a Minor Key") | Chad Singer | TV guest appearance | Played a law student investigating a professor's murder in this episode framed as Jessica Fletcher's book plot.[68] |
| 1987 | General Hospital | Dusty Walker | TV series (recurring) | Appeared in a short arc as a musician character on the ABC soap opera.[69] |
| 1988 | Alfred Hitchcock Presents (Season 3, Episode 7: "Hippocritic Oath") | Dale Thurston | TV guest appearance | Starred in this revival episode about a doctor facing ethical dilemmas.[31] |
| 1988 | Matlock (Season 2, Episodes 17–18: "The Investigation") | Craig Gentry | TV guest appearance | Portrayed a client in this two-part legal drama episode.[66] |
| 1988 | Roots: The Gift | Edmund Parker Jr. | TV movie | Played a key role in this sequel to the Roots miniseries, focusing on Kunta Kinte's descendant.[31] |
| 1988 | Once Upon a Texas Train | Cotton | TV movie | Western telefilm co-starring with Willie Nelson as a young outlaw.[66] |
| 1991 | Strays | Paul Dean | TV movie | Lead role in this thriller about a man stalked by feral dogs.[66] |
| 1993–1995 | Blood Brothers | Mickey Johnstone / Eddie Johnstone | Broadway musical | Co-starred with half-brother David Cassidy as the twins in Willy Russell's production at the Music Box Theatre.[70] |
| 1995 | Your Studio and You | Himself | Short film (uncredited) | Cameo in this satirical Universal Studios employee video directed by Trey Parker.[31] |