The Oklahoman

As ‘Footloose’ turns 40, the Oklahoma town that inspired it cuts loose

- Brandy McDonnell

ELMORE CITY — Hundreds of people filled the stands at Elmore City-Pernell High School’s Royce Teakell Gym on a recent Friday night, not to watch the students play a game but to see local teenagers engage in a different sort of school tradition.

Dressed for Junior/Senior Prom in snazzy suits and shimmering gowns, the high-schoolers circled the gym primarily in pairs. Minding the girls’ long dresses, couples carefully stepped onto four strategica­lly placed platforms, posing for photograph­s as the crowd clapped and cheered.

The annual promenade in the gym gives family, friends and neighbors the chance to see the teens decked out in their finery before the students load the buses to head off to the actual prom.

“Everybody turns out for it. It’s a big event for the kids to be able to get dressed up and get to parade around and get to enjoy the evening,” said Superinten­dent Sheila Riddle, who attended this year’s promenade on April 12 not only in her official capacity, but also because she had a daughter among the prom participan­ts.

Riddle said the students fundraise to get the venue for their “typical small-town prom.” She said students will have a meal when they get there, then they have the dance floor for the evening. After that, they load up buses and head to an after-prom and usually keep them there until 3 or 4 in the morning before going back home.

Since the sense of excitement and goodwill was as evident as the sequins and corsages at the April 12 promenade, it’s safe to say that local attitudes about the prom have changed considerab­ly over the past four decades in the small Oklahoma town, where organizing the school’s first prom brought community controvers­y, national media attention and, eventually, a cinematic legacy.

“It was so volatile in the community. ... And we just wanted to dance and to have a real prom,” recalled Mary Ann Temple, a 1981 Elmore City graduate who helped lead the campaign to organize the school’s first prom.

“So, to see the way they do it now is wonderful, absolutely wonderful. ... It’s a dream come true.”

The polarizing planning for Elmore City’s first prom in 1980 was the inspiratio­n for the enduringly popular 1984 movie “Footloose,” which was released in theaters 40 years ago this year. The Garvin County community will celebrate its Hollywood history Saturday, April 20 at its annual Footloose Festival, which draws thousands of people every spring to the town of fewer than 750 residents.

“It is the biggest event that happens in the community,” said Elmore City Chamber of Commerce President Joni Oller. “We do have a lot of visitors. It’s shocking every year how many come into town for it.”

How did a group of Oklahoma students challenge their town’s no-dancing law to plan their school’s first prom?

Now 60 years old, Temple, a lifelong Elmore City resident, said she’s become accustomed to having a mission she embarked on as a smalltown 16-year-old play a starring role in her life.

“I would honestly say there’s not a month that goes by that I don’t have at least one interview,” she said. “Of course, it’s not the same doing them without Leonard ... but I always mention him.”

In 1980, Temple and classmate Leonard Coffee, who died in 2021 at the age of 57, were sweetheart­s and junior class officers, the group who spearheade­d the student movement to organize a real prom. They wanted to upgrade the yearly junior/senior banquet, which typically involved just decorating the school cafeteria, sharing a meal and then participat­ing in a class activity, usually renting the bowling alley in nearby Lindsay.

“I asked, ‘Well, why can’t we have a prom like other schools do?’ And it went like wildfire. Right after I asked that question, the rest of the class was, like, ‘Yeah, we want to do that,’” Coffee told The Oklahoman in a 2010 interview.

What he didn’t realize then was that Elmore City had a law prohibitin­g public dancing.

“Elmore City would close the cafeteria down for the entire week, and the kids would eat sack lunches so the juniors could have the whole week

to decorate and transform that cafeteria into the oasis of the theme. ... But it was heartbreak­ing. We would raise maybe $10,000 to decorate — and that was a lot of money back then — to put in decoration­s for an hour, just for (everybody) to leave and go drink,” Temple recalled.

How did Elmore City students win the fight to organize their first prom?

The town, which was founded by James Elmore in the 1860s, outlawed dancing from the time it was incorporat­ed in 1898 until 1980, said former City Clerk Lisa Rollings.

Some local churches and residents staunchly opposed the prom proposal on religious grounds, believing dancing was immoral. The opposition was fierce, and, initially, it seemed they had the law on their side. But Rollings recalled that her father, Red Travis, who was mayor at the time, saw it differently.

“My dad said, ‘This isn’t a public event. It’s a private junior/senior banquet by the school. ... This doesn’t have anything to do with the law,’” Rollings said.

That meant the decision to have a prom with dancing instead of just a banquet was entirely in the hands of the school board. Temple’s father, Raymond Temple, was school board president at the time, and he cast the tie-breaking vote in favor of having a prom.

It was the safety concerns that swayed him: Many of the students left the banquet and never made it to the Lindsay bowling alley, opting instead to go out drinking and driving in the nearby Table Top Mountains.

“He was a guest at the prom ... and I was so proud of him. To be able to get out on the dance floor and have a dance with my dad was iconic. I just loved it. And, of course, I loved dancing with Leonard,” Mary Ann Temple recalled, noting that her parents still live on their Elmore City ranch.

How did Elmore City’s first prom go on to inspire a Hollywood hit?

Although some residents still opposed the prom, the school board’s decision stood. The students not only decorated the cafeteria for prom, but they also organized the gym into a game room as an alternativ­e for teens who didn’t want to dance.

Picked as one of the sophomores to serve the meal, Rollings said students were slow to take to the dance floor.

The television cameras, photograph­ers and journalist­s from across the country encircling the dance floor undoubtedl­y contribute­d to their nervousnes­s. By the time the students had picked their prom attire, the small-town controvers­y had become a big news story. Not only did People magazine chronicle the first prom, but the dance even made the front page in China.

Fresh off co-writing the Oscar-winning theme for the movie “Fame,” Dean Pitchford read the news and thought it might make a good film. The 2024 Songwriter­s Hall of Fame inductee traveled to Elmore City to research it and ultimately penned not only the screenplay but also the lyrics to every song on what would become the smash soundtrack.

The 1984 film starred Kevin Bacon in his breakout role of Ren McCormack, a Chicago teen who moves with his mother to the small town of Bomont and struggles to adapt. He befriends a local cowboy named Willard (the late Chris Penn), falls for the wild-child daughter (Lori Singer) of the strict local minister (John Lithgow) and tries to overturn the local law against dancing.

How has ‘Footloose’ and the first prom turned Elmore City into a dance destinatio­n?

For the 40th anniversar­y of “Footloose,” Paramount Home Entertainm­ent released in February a new 4K Blu-ray release, and Bacon recently accepted an invitation to attend this year’s prom at Payson, Utah, where the movie was filmed.

In Elmore City, locals cut “Footloose,” with a public celebratio­n of the 30th anniversar­y of the first prom in 2010. That spun off into the annual Footloose Fest, which takes place on Main Street the third Saturday in April.

The Footloose Fest includes a car show, vendor and lawn mower races, but it mostly centers on dance, from an array of contests to the street dance that caps the event.

Back at promenade, Superinten­dent Riddle said Bacon has an open invitation to attend any future Elmore CityPernel­l Junior/Senior Prom. She could guarantee that “Footloose” would be on the playlist.

“Every single year, they will play that song, and the kids will enjoy that and dance along with it.”

 ?? PARAMOUNT PICTURES ?? Ren, played by Kevin Bacon, teaches his friend Willard, Christophe­r Penn, to dance.
PARAMOUNT PICTURES Ren, played by Kevin Bacon, teaches his friend Willard, Christophe­r Penn, to dance.
 ?? BRANDY MCDONNELL/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? Elmore City-Pernell High School students participat­e in the annual promenade in the school gym before their Junior/Senior Prom on April 12 in Elmore City.
BRANDY MCDONNELL/THE OKLAHOMAN Elmore City-Pernell High School students participat­e in the annual promenade in the school gym before their Junior/Senior Prom on April 12 in Elmore City.
 ?? BRANDY MCDONNELL/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? Elmore City-Pernell High School students participat­e in the annual promenade on April 12 in the school gym before their Junior/Senior Prom in Elmore City. The 1984 movie “Footloose,” released 40 years ago this year, is based on the successful efforts of Elmore City High School students to organize their first prom in 1980.
BRANDY MCDONNELL/THE OKLAHOMAN Elmore City-Pernell High School students participat­e in the annual promenade on April 12 in the school gym before their Junior/Senior Prom in Elmore City. The 1984 movie “Footloose,” released 40 years ago this year, is based on the successful efforts of Elmore City High School students to organize their first prom in 1980.
 ?? PROVIDED BY MARY ANN TEMPLE-LEE ?? Mary Ann Temple-Lee, center, and her parents Raymond and Mary Temple, are pictured at Temple-Lee’s senior prom at Elmore City High School in 1981.
PROVIDED BY MARY ANN TEMPLE-LEE Mary Ann Temple-Lee, center, and her parents Raymond and Mary Temple, are pictured at Temple-Lee’s senior prom at Elmore City High School in 1981.
 ?? THE OKLAHOMAN FILE ?? Mary Ann Temple-Lee and Leonard Coffee, who were high school sweetheart­s and junior class officers who campaigned for Elmore City High School’s first prom in 1980, pose for a 2010 photograph at The Oklahoman studios in Oklahoma City. They inspired the principal characters of the 1984 hit movie “Footloose.”
THE OKLAHOMAN FILE Mary Ann Temple-Lee and Leonard Coffee, who were high school sweetheart­s and junior class officers who campaigned for Elmore City High School’s first prom in 1980, pose for a 2010 photograph at The Oklahoman studios in Oklahoma City. They inspired the principal characters of the 1984 hit movie “Footloose.”

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