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Charlotte Perry and
Portia Mansfield
Mansfield 1887-1979, Perry 1889-1983
Inducted 2004
Adopted by June Lindenmayer Friends of Perry-Mansfield, Inc.
Charlotte Perry and Portia Mansfield left a positive
imprint on the arts and culture in Colorado and the nation for over
70 years. They had unprecedented influence on vaudeville, Broadway, dance
(particularly modern dance), education, recreation, and documentary
motion
pictures. Perry and Mansfield met at Smith College in 1910. During
a summer visit to the Perry home in Denver, Perry’s father included
the two women on a hunting trip to Northwest Colorado. It was during
this time that they began dreaming of a dance camp in the Rocky Mountains. “The
Ladies,” as this duo were known, founded the Perry-Mansfield
Performing Arts School and Camp in Steamboat Springs in 1913. No other
dance or
theater camp in the United States offered their unique combination
of activities. Along with creative and educational programs of dance,
drama,
art, music, and writing, during the early years the camp offered pack
trips, tennis, swimming, overnight camping outings, exploration of
Indian artifacts and ceremonies, and English and Western styles of
horseback
riding. The camp also became a rating center for horsemanship. Today
it is the oldest continuous dance school and camp in the nation and
was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.
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