Q&A with âDWTSâ champ Shawn Johnson
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Thereâs hardly been a momentâs rest for Shawn Johnson since Tuesday night, when the Olympic gold medalist bounced past Gilles Marini to nab Season 8âs âDancing With the Starsâ title. We got to chat with the gymnast while she was in New York on her media tour, and the 17-year-old from Iowa couldnât have been nicer. Hereâs what the youngest âDWTSâ champ had to say about the nail-biting finale, her close bond with partner Mark Ballas and where the shiny Mirrorball trophy will fit next to all of her other hardware.
Howâs it going? Iâm sure everyone wants a piece of you.
Itâs been a pretty crazy few days.
Have you been able to get any sleep or rest at all?
Uh, not really, but itâs OK. Iâll just live off of caffeine for a while.
Take us through the moment on the dance floor right before host Tom Bergeron called your name. What was going through your mind at that point?
A lot. Before I went out, Mark gave me a few last words to say, âIâm really proud of you, and you did great, youâve totally grown as a person, and youâre already a winner.â ⌠And when we got up there, and we were just standing and we were both so nervous. But weâd accepted the fact that, you know, first, second or third, we were all winners, and we all made the finals and done great, but we just were standing there and so nervous. And I was [pretending to hear] Tom Bergeron say, Gilles Marini! Or ⌠Shawn Johnson, and it kept on going back and forth in my mind. And all of a sudden he said âShawn,â and my jaw was on the floor. Iâve never imagined being the winner of âDancing With the Stars.â Iâm so excited. It still doesnât register to me.
Are you still trying to process the whole thing?
Yeah. Itâs still totally just a whirlwind and a dream.
But deep down, you wanted to win, right?
Oh, definitely. You donât sign onto things like this to say, âOh, I want to make it to Week 2,â but I mean, everybody wants to go for that trophy. Thatâs what youâre there for. Except youâre also trying to dance and have a fun time, a great time, and entertain America. I mean, thereâs a lot to it, more than just winning. But thatâs definitely icing on the cake.
Did you feel bad for Gilles at all? He was such a strong competitor.
Definitely. I mean. Everybody there I felt deserved a trophy for being in the top three. We had all made it to the finals. I mean, at the end of the day, only one gets it. But I felt like everybodyâs in the same position, you know? We were all so close. Less than 1%. So I feel like he is just as much a winner as anybody else.
What did he say to you? Did you and he talk about it afterwards?
Yeah, weâve become so close. Heâs like a dad to me. He came over to me and gave me a hug, and said âCongratulations,â you know, âI love you, and you deserve it.â It was sweet.
It really did seem like all the contestants and pro dancers got so close over the course of the season. Can you talk about the relationships that were forged?
Weâve become like a family. We goof off around each other, and weâre so comfortable with each another, you know? Itâs like weâre all brothers and sisters and stuff. Weâre just there for each other, weâre so supportive, and everybody wanted to see everybody succeed and do their best. I mean, Iâm sure weâll keep in touch.
Can you describe your close relationship with your pro partner, Mark, as well? He looked like he was about to faint when your names were announced.
Yeah, he was so shocked. I mean, he worked so hard for something, and he put in so much time and effort into it, and you know, youâre standing there and youâre remembering the hard times you went through, and good times.⌠And no pro male dancer has ever won two [âDWTSâ championships], you know, so he made history, and made a title for himself. ⌠He was as shocked as I was. And we have such a good relationship too. Weâre like best friends and have been through a lot together. I mean, we almost killed each other at some points, because you know, the frustration â but we made it through and weâre really proud and Iâm sure weâll also keep in touch.
What was your favorite routine this season?
Well, of course the freestyle, by far, is my favorite. We just put so much effort into that and really just went crazy with it, and had so much fun. It was just our best costumes, our best performance, and all we did was go out there and have fun. But my other one was the paso. I loved that dance, I felt I really had a great time in that dance and showed everybody that I could do any type of dance.
Do you feel like it was the freestyle dance that kind of put you over the edge and gave you that ultimate advantage?
Um, I think so. Everybody always says that the freestyle is kind of the make or break, the one that counts the most. And I felt like we really hit a home run with that and made a great impression.
Was there a dance that you wished that you could do over again?
I donât know if thereâs one that I would do over, because I felt like everything that happened made me get to this point, but I think the samba is the one I wish I could have done a little better. It was just one that I struggled on and couldnât really get the feel for it just right. ⌠I mean, the struggle was what motivated me to do better the next week, so I guess I wouldnât change anything.
Did Apolo Anton Ohnoâs comment â that no Olympian who made it to the finals didnât win the award â put more pressure on you, or did it inspire you just to work harder?
Yeah, it definitely added a little pressure. But I mean, it was a joking thing, and it motivated me even more.
Was your experience on the show what you expected it to be when you first signed on?
I honestly didnât know what to expect. But it was everything I dreamed of and more. I had the best time ever.
Will all this ballroom dancing and coming out of your shell hurt your gymnastics?
No, never. I mean, if anything itâll help me. Itâll help me be a better dancer and get that grace that I kind of lacked before this.
Your parents were at every show. How did they feel about you doing some âolderâ moves, like in your rumba?
They didnât care. It was part of the show, itâs part of the dancing. Kids that are 7 are doing ballroom dances that are more you know, revealing and stuff than that. Itâs part of the sport, and itâs part of the acting. âŚ
How does the media surrounding you on this show compare to the media hubbub that surrounded you after the Olympics?
Itâs different, of course, just because itâs totally different experience and different audience. Iâm getting almost more attention from this than from the Olympics. Itâs one of those things where itâs more in the public eye. Itâs a TV show rather than a sport, and itâs sad to say, but the TV shows usually get more viewers than sports on a regular basis.
Do you think that you being the youngest champion will help other young people get into ballroom dancing?
I hope so, I hope itâll inspire younger people, or younger kids and stuff, to try anything. Because age is really is just a number, and you can do anything at any age, and have a good time at it. So hopefully itâll do that too.
Where are you going to put the Mirrorball trophy?
Probably just in my room. Next to my medals.
â Allyssa Lee
Photo: ABC/Kelsey McNeal (2)