Join in celebrating Dolly’s 80th birthday!
Our lifesize cardboard cutout of Dolly Parton lives full-time in the front lobby of The Community Foundation of Harrisonburg and Rockingham, but occasionally we field requests for her presence at local events.
On Saturday, Jan. 17, we’ll be driving Dolly to two celebrations to mark her 80th birthday.

Singer and songwriter Rebecca Porter hosts a January 19 celebration of Dolly Parton’s 80th birthday at Pale Fire. She’ll also be at Massanutten Regional Library at 11 a.m. for a chilldren’s party honoring Dolly. (Grow Explore Photography/Heather Goodloe)
At 11 a.m., you can find us at the Massanutten Regional Library with local singer-songwriter Rebecca Porter for a sing-along, cake, and a reading of Dolly’s children’s book Coat of Many Colors. This event is free and open to the public.
A portion of the proceeds of the evening concert will benefit the Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library program, sponsored locally by The Community Foundation of Harrisonburg and Rockingham. Tickets are $12 in advance and $15 at the door. Click here to purchase tickets.
Give to the local Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library program.
She and her son enjoyed receiving Imagination Library books and Coat of Many Colors is still one of their favorites. “I was amazed and thankful for the variety of books we received over the years, books that are still in his collection!” she said.
Approximately 3,430 children, or 44% of residents under the age of five in the Harrisonburg and Rockingham County area participate in the program. Cost runs about $16,000 a month, with half of the tab picked up by the state of Virginia. Local branches must purchase the books and pay for the mailing costs as well as provide administrative support, while The Dollywood Foundation selects the books, manages the global program and the monthly mailings.
The program has been proven to increase school readiness, relationships with caregivers, and attitudes toward reading.
Twenty-five years later, the program has donated more than 270 million books to children under the age of five in four countries — including to more than 2,000 “graduates” who have aged out of the program in Harrisonburg and Rockingham County.
