Bookmark this page or copy and paste URL to Email message Charlotte Barrows Chorpenning Collection 1948-1977MSS-287
Biographical NoteCharlotte Barrows Chorpenning, theatre for young audiences playwright, stage director, researcher and educator was born in 1872. She was educated at Iowa Agricultural College and Cornell University, from which she received a Bachelor of Letters degree in 1894. Following graduation she taught high school in Springfield, Ohio and Denver, Colorado and English at the Normal School in Winona, Minnesota. After writing her first play, Between the Lines in 1912, Chorpenning was accepted into George Pierce Baker's playwriting class at Harvard (Radcliffe College) in anticipation of a career as a playwright for adults. When Chorpenning returned to teaching at Winona she served as a playwright-in-residence for community theatres in the area. Her article, "Putting on a Community Play" in the Quarterly Journal of Speech Education in 1919, led to her national prominence and requests for her services throughout the United States. In 1921, Neva Boyd invited Chorpenning to present a workshop at the Recreation Training School in Chicago. She was offered a position on this school's faculty and accepted. She taught classes and supervised students work in the local settlement houses until 1927, when the school merged with the sociology department at Northwestern University. Chorpenning joined Northwestern's School of Speech as an instructor of dramatics and worked with recreational drama and on university theatre productions. Her office-mate was Winifred Ward, head of the children's theatre program, and Chorpenning served as an advisor to her and the Children's Theatre of Evanston. In 1928 Ward consulted her regarding some rewrites for the December 1928 production of The Wizard of Oz. Following the success of this production, the theatre produced the following Chorpenning plays: The Emperor's New Clothes, The Princess and the Vagabond and The King's Ears. In the spring of 1932, Maurice Gnesin, head of the Goodman Theatre part of the Chicago Art Institute, offered Chorpenning the job of Director of the Goodman Children's Theatre. At the age of 60, Chorpenning accepted. She continued in this job until 1952 and during that time wrote and directed most of the productions for children. She also became interested in analyzing audience responses to plays and trained observers to collect data. Chorpenning wrote at least 55 children's plays, many of which were published by Coach House Press, Samuel French, Children's Theatre Press (later named Anchorage Press) and Dramatists' Play Service. She collaborated on the following plays: The Elves and the Shoemaker (with Nora MacAlvay, 1946), Little Lee Bobo (with Rose Hum Lee, 1948), Flibbertygibbet (with Nora MacAlvay, 1952), The Magic Horn (with Ann Nicholson, 1955) and Juan and the Magic Fruit (with Juan Edades). In 1953 her only book, Twenty-One Years with Children's Theatre, was published by the Children's Theatre Press. Chorpenning died on January 7, 1955. Scope and Content NoteThe Charlotte Barrows Chorpenning Collection, .25 linear feet, contains the collection of the theatre for young audiences playwright, stage director, researcher and educator from 1948 through 1977. This is an artificially created collection. It consists of materials that were donated by numerous people, sometimes just one item or on other occasions a few related items given to them by Chorpenning. Included are: a photograph of Chorpenning; drafts of her plays; Goodman programs; obituaries; newspaper interviews; correspondence; and an article written by Chorpenning. Bulk dates are 1948-1955. ArrangementThis collection consists of one box.RestrictionsAccess RestrictionsTo view this collection, make an appointment at least five business days prior to your visit by contacting Ask an Archivist or calling (480) 965-4932. Appointments in the Wurzburger Reading Room at Hayden Library (rm. 138) on the Tempe campus are available Monday through Friday. Check the ASU Library Hours page for current availability. CopyrightArizona State University does not own the copyright to this collection. We recognize that it is incumbent upon the researcher to procure permission to publish information from this collection from the owner of the copyright. Related MaterialSee CT-187, Spotlight on the Child: Studies in the History of American Children's Theatre for a biographical chapter on Chorpenning written by Roger Bedard. See the Sara Spencer Collection (ACC # 2004-03297), Box 16, for correspondence between Sara Spencer, the publisher and owner of Anchorage Press, formerly called the Children's Theatre Press, and Chorpenning regarding the publication of Chorpenning's plays and her only book; and Boxes 9-12 for production materials for several of Chorpenning's plays. See the Roger Bedard Papers, MSS-286, for Bedards research for his dissertation on Charlotte Chorpenning. Access TermsPersonal Name(s) Chorpenning, Charlotte B. (Charlotte Barrows) Subject(s) Children's plays, American Children's theater. Dramatist. Administrative InformationPreferred Citation[Identification of item], Charlotte Barrows Chorpenning Collection, MSS-287, Arizona State University Library. ProvenanceThe Charlotte Barrows Chorpenning Collection was received from Mary Dodge, a friend of Chorpenning, and from other donors as recorded in multiple accessions. Container List
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