Support Provided By Dancer Chloe Arnold attributes her professional success to her early exposure to arts education. At age six, she began taking dance lessons at a studio in a Washington, D.C. strip mall. It wasn't a start that led anyone to predict that she'd one day earn an Emmy nod for choreography or a bachelor's degree from an Ivy League university. Arnold, however, has managed to do both. She is now paying it forward — using her nonprofit, the Chloe and Maud Foundation, to expose underprivileged youth to the arts. Arnold credits dance with saving her life, for it kept her emotionally afloat as she wrestled with her parents' divorce, grew up in an economically-disadvantaged community and faced other challenges as a kid in the 1980s and '90s.