As awkward as it sounds. I'm not Shane Larkin, Barry Larkin's son, anymore. It's Barry Larkin, the father of Shane Larkin.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I was kind of smart enough when I was young, 14 or 15 years old, to realize that if you're ever going to do anything and step out of the shadow of your own dad - not only in hockey, but in life itself - you're going to have to learn you're Brett and not 'Bobby's son.'
When your mom and dad read the paper, they like to know their sons are on the roster.
I'm a character and a sports entertainer and a wrestler, but I'm also a father and a husband and a provider.
If I wasn't Eddie Albert's son, I'd be someone else's. It gave me a chance to do a lot of traveling, but mostly I'm glad I'm his son because he's such a good man.
I thought I could never be the actor Dad was, so I avoided it for a while.
Because Dad was famous, I was so used to being identified as 'John Huston's daughter' that I couldn't think of myself as anyone else.
It's been a lot of fun getting to work with Tracy Middendorf, who plays my mom. As an actor, it's always fun to have different parents and to create different familial dynamics than you have in your real life.
Truthfully, I'm still Corey Hart, Dad, first.
I was a sort of son to Ike, and it was the other way round with Kennedy.
A father-son relationship is strong, like no other teammates. You could be straightforward with one another.