Amber Marshall: Horse Girl

Let’s get something straight. While we’re busy arguing about the psychological warfare of prestige HBO dramas or whatever culinary trauma is trending on Hulu, a massive global audience is quietly tuning in every week to watch a woman heal traumatized horses.
I am talking about CBC's Heartland, and specifically, I am talking about Amber Marshall.
If you don’t know the name, you’re missing one of the most unusual flexes in modern television. By 2015, Heartland had already surpassed Street Legal as Canada’s longest-running one-hour drama. It pushed past 14th seasons, filming through brutal pandemic protocols—no hugs, no shared snacks, just masks, swabs, and the Alberta wind cutting across open fields.
And right at the center of it is Marshall, a woman who didn't just accept the role of Amy Fleming in 2007, but completely absorbed it into her DNA.
The VHS Tape That Built an Empire
The origin story is almost too perfectly fitting to believe. Marshall, an Ontario kid who spent her teenage years boarding horses and getting mocked by classmates for her acting ambitions, missed the first two Heartland auditions. Her agent called her on a train and told her to put something on tape.
She recorded it on VHS. She had to find a local company to digitize it. When the producers finally navigated the slow internet speeds of the dial-up era to load the file, they saw a girl looking straight at the camera saying, 'Hi, I'm Amber Marshall. I have two horses; I love to ride.'
Boom. Sold. She wasn't acting; she was declaring a lifestyle.
We love to turn 'Horse Girls' into an internet punchline. We meme them as intense, socially awkward kids who gallop around the track field. But Marshall took that exact energy, weaponized it, and built an empire. While other actors treat network television as a stepping stone—bouncing the second they get a whiff of a Marvel audition or complaining about being stuck in the middle of nowhere—Marshall planted her boots in the dirt.
'I don't think this lifestyle is for everyone,' Marshall said. 'Some actors... they don't want to be in Alberta for five or six months a year; they prefer to be in downtown Vancouver or Toronto doing projects that excite them.'
Not Marshall. She bought a ranch. She married a heavy-equipment operator who had to convince her to buy a television. She surrounds herself with cows, dogs, cats, and chickens. When the season wraps, she doesn't jet off to Los Angeles to network; she goes home and sits on a fence.
Escaping the Prestige Trap
There is a radical sincerity to Heartland that critics almost always ignore because it feels totally uncool. The show is utterly devoid of blood, gore, or cynical antiheroes. It is about a family working out real problems. When Marshall says things like, 'Humans judge by what they see; animals judge by what's inside, what's in your heart,' it sounds like a needlepoint pillow. But when she says it, you believe it.
She isn't 'whispering' to horses. As she sharply corrects people, she is listening to them.
In an industry obsessed with the next edgy thing, Marshall's unapologetic consistency is a breath of fresh Alberta air. She took the abuse from high school bullies who prank-called her landline, ignored them, and built a global community. She reads letters from fans who credit the show with helping them survive divorce, grief, isolation. She runs her own merchandise through local Canadian suppliers because she wants the ecosystem to stay small and real.
Acting is a job for most people. For Amber Marshall, it is a calling. She won the game by never pretending to be anything other than exactly who she is.

THIS IS why you are watched and beloved. You are you. I'm just an older lady whose heart realized she missed out on being around horses, riding a horse! Living country, western, cowboyish life. It was always in me and watching your show each week brought it bubbling forth to a bubble of I want to ride a horse, at least once! I respect the whole life and manners and respect. I don't want to keep saying, if only I was 50 again! ok, 60 again! Ok, in a week, 70 again! Not every country-western-cowboy life is welcoming like yours. I reside in that old town and neighbors, still never was put on a horse...but now its all weekend renters now, SO MY Dogs wake me daily to Heartland on TV! They are even bigger fans than me. CONGRATS for making us feel welcome and like we are almost there.
★★★★★