ASL CAN Camp

2022 Update: C.A.N. was not able to pull together a leadership team or enough support to host camp this year. If you are interested in volunteering for the leadership team, fundraising, camp planning, or camp staff for ASL CAN Camp 2023, please let us know. You can email us at connect@aslcan.com

Camp is a magical time that is especially inspiring for deaf youth. See below for some of the magic from ASL CAN Camp 2019 and 2021:

ASL CAN Camp 2019

ASL CAN Camp 2021

Join Stacy, Hayden, and an all-star troupe for Wild Horse Theatre Camp 2021… and let your dreams run wild!! With American Sign Language and Deaf role models, campers will learn the elements of theatre, dance, storytelling, and ASL poetry.

Hosted at Camp Marshall on beautiful Flathead Lake, near Polson, Montana. This week long camp is open to deaf and hard-of-hearing students, CODAs, and SODAs ages 12-18. 

Through the hard work and generosity of an amazing community, this camp is offered to students at no charge. If you would like to support this effort and make it possible for more kids to come to camp now and in the future, please donate here.

Meet the Wild Horse Theatre Camp Team:

Hayden Orr

Stacy Lawrence

Hollis Fudge

Brianna Keogh

Brianna C. Keogh, alumna of Gallaudet University ’19, provides access and supports the deaf ecosystem in her jobs at deaf-owned and operated businesses DPAN.TV and Mozzeria. In addition to doing what she loves, she enjoys going on long walks (with dogs if possible!), updating her blog, reading books, and cherishing the magic of human connection, storytelling, and community. She has always loved reading and telling stories from a young age, as well as lifelong learning, and strongly believes in each person and story’s ability to make an impact on the world.

Crom Saunders

Crom Saunders is currently Director of Deaf Studies at the American Sign Language Department of Columbia College, Chicago. Crom has interpreted dozens of plays, from children’s theatre to musicals, including at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, and has taught dozens of ASL linguistics and theatrical workshops across the nation, in addition to working as a Director of ASL for several theatre companies across the nation. Crom also performs his one person show, “Cromania!” internationally.  And yes, the eyebrows are real. 




Tori Covell

Victoria Covell will be a 4th-year majoring in Graphic Design with a minor in Mobile Design and Development at Rochester Institute of Technology. She is from Jacksonville, Illinois. Victoria danced at Sara’s Studio of Dance for fifteen years and participated in the studio’s Dance Company and Competition. She attended a number of dance conventions and competitions including Revolution Nationals in Chicago (2013) where she took first place in her solo age group and fifth overall. Victoria has performed in The Nutcracker for the Springfield Ballet company, Morgan County Fair Talent Show placing third. In addition, Victoria has performed at the Statue of Liberty in New York city, with the Harlem Globetrotters, and at Disneyland in California. In her senior year of high school, Victoria presented the piece, I Am, to the world. She qualified for nationals in Daytona Beach, Florida, earning a platinum score, but more importantly she shared her message with a wider audience. On April 27 , 2018, Victoria competed in Dr. Munson’s Performing Arts Competition at the annual Imagine RIT Festival where she won first place sharing her story with her RIT family. As her YouTube video continues to be shared and viewed worldwide, her hope is that people will see, despite having a profound hearing loss or any hearing loss at all, that deaf and hard of hearing individuals can enjoy music and dance.

Montana Family ASL

Counselors & Support Staff

Wild Horse Theatre Camp Sponsors: