
Glen Gordon
Career at a glance
6Hallmark films
2 at Christmas
across 5 rated films
Mostly standard issue
Best reviewed
Most recent
Dream Moms2023
Glen Gordon is the kind of actor Hallmark keeps in the supporting bench rather than on the poster, and across six films from 2016 to 2023 he has never taken a lead. That suits the work. With an average rating of 6.6 and a low weirdness score, he turns up in conventional, gently played stories, often a small town in spring rather than a December snow globe. Only two of his six are Christmas titles, so the holiday machine is not really his beat. His best showing is Unexpected Grace from 2023, which at 7.4 sits well clear of the rest, with Sweet Carolina and Open by Christmas trailing at 6.8. He has no fixed partner either, drifting through different casts rather than locking into a pair. If you watch enough of these, you have seen him steadying the edges of the frame.
Glen’s signature
Across 6 films, Glen often leans into Christmas, often plays an executive and is usually set in small towns.
- Christmas2 films
- small towns3 films
- an executive2 films
- second-chance romance2 films
- a scene-stealing pet3 films
- a return home2 films
On-screen partners

Glen’s most frequent on-screen partner is Erica Durance, with 2 films together.
Where Glen fits in
The corners of the Hallmark universe Glen keeps turning up in. Each one is a full ranked guide.
All 6 movies
Newest first2020s
4 filmsUndated
1 filmGlen’s standouts
In pictures
A quick look at Glen’s Hallmark run — headshot and the posters fans know best.
Beyond Hallmark
Where else you might recognise Glen from — notable roles outside the Hallmark catalogue.
- Keeperas Teen Malcolm2025
- Noelleas Young Nick (uncredited)2019
- Deadly Classas Mike Ray2019 · TV
- DC's Legends of Tomorrowas Bertie2016 · TV
- Tomorrowlandas Donnie / Science Kid (uncredited)2015
- Wayward Pinesas Finn (uncredited)2015 · TV
- Bates Motelas Harry2013 · TV
- Arrowas Little Boy2012 · TV
Movies by year
Ratings profile
Average 6.6 across 5 rated movies — each dot is one film.





