Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Charlotte Chorpenning

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Charlotte Chorpenning


Role
  
Playwright

Charlotte Chorpenning httpsjuniortheatrecomwpcontentuploads2014

Died
  
1955, Warwick, New York, United States

Books
  
The Magic Horn, The Elves and the Shoemaker

Charlotte B. Chorpenning (1873–1955) was a children's playwright. When she was 60 years old, after her husband died, she began writing plays for children. She was also the artistic director of the children's theatre at the Goodman Theater in Chicago, and remains the most produced playwright in Goodman history. She adapted many famous fairy and folktales. She believed that children would come to see plays about characters they knew already. She also strongly believed that plays should not talk down to children, and that children should be able to identify with the lead. Chorpenning described her writing and directing process in her book, Twenty-One Years With Children's Theatre, published in 1954.

Contents

Chorpenning studied at Radcliffe College. From about 1915-1919 she was a playwright in residence in Winona, Minnesota organizations.

Chorpenning wrote adaptations of many stories and many of these plays remain in print. One play in particular is out of print: an adaptation of Helen Bannerman's Little Black Sambo and, according to Jodi Van Der Horn-Gibson, aside from some unflattering stereotypical names and the same confusion Bannerman had with regard to the difference between India and Africa, the play is a non-offensive version of the story.

Chorpenning died on January 7, 1955, at her home in Warwick, NY. The obituary published in the Educational Theatre Journal stated "The American theatre is indebted to her for her skill as a playwright, her ability as a teacher, her strength as a leader, and her humanity as a friend."

The American Alliance for Theatre and Education awards the Charlotte B. Chorpenning Award for the body of work of a children's playwright. Award recipients include Doug Cooney (2010), Barry Kornhauser (2009), James DeVita (2007), and Aurand Harris (1985 and 1967).

Published by Anchorage Press Plays

Cinderella

The Elves and the Shoemaker

Flibbertygibbet

The Indian Captive

Jack and the Beanstalk

Little Red Riding Hood

Robinson Crusoe

Rumplestiltzkin

The Sleeping Beauty

Published by Classic Youth Plays

A Letter to Santa Claus

Lincoln's Secret Messenger

Published by Dramatic Publishing

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer

Alice in Wonderland

Hansel and Gretel

The Magic Horn

Many Moons, based on the illustrated book of the same name written by James Thurber

Rip Van Winkle

Published by Samuel French, Inc.

The Emperor's New Clothes

Tom Sawyer's Treasure Hunt

Out of Print

Little Black Sambo

References

Charlotte Chorpenning Wikipedia