Call & Times

Theater raises $500 at hit show for infamous mayor’s charity

- By JENNIFER McDERMOTT

PROVIDENCE — The theater staging a play about the notorious late Mayor Vincent “Buddy” Cianci says it has raised just $500 for the charity bearing his name, while collecting donations during the show’s soldout run.

Trinity Repertory Company is raising money for the educationa­l foundation during “The Prince of Providence,” with solicitati­ons in programs, collection buckets at the door nightly and Cianci’s own pasta sauce for sale. These efforts had raised about $500 as of Friday, the theater said.

Cianci establishe­d a college scholarshi­p fund for Providence school children in 1994, during his second stint in

office and before he was sent to prison in 2002 for presiding over widespread corruption in City Hall. An Associated Press examinatio­n in 2014 found the charity had amassed hundreds of thousands of dollars, but gave out just a few thousand per year in grants and spent most of its money on expenses other than scholarshi­ps. Cianci said then they were building the fund so it continues making money.

Cianci’s charities were overhauled after he died in January 2016, merging into the Cianci Educationa­l Foundation.

The theater says it didn’t seek or receive any assurances from the foundation that it’s being run well today, or have any concerns. The play, which premiered Sept. 12, was extended due to its popularity and ends Sunday.

Cianci’s nephew, Brad Turchetta, had hoped the theater would raise more for the foundation. By comparison, Turchetta said, the Graduate Hotel in Providence removed portraits of Cianci in response

to a complaint about his criminal history and sold them, raising roughly $15,000 to $20,000 for the foundation’s scholarshi­ps.

Turchetta, the foundation’s executor, said Trinity offered to fundraise after some of Cianci’s relatives and friends publicly complained when it was announced in March that “The Prince of Providence” would be inspired by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Mike Stanton’s biography of the same name. They think the book is inaccurate and felt Cianci’s memoir would’ve been a better choice.

Turchetta said the foundation is run differentl­y now, with a board that distribute­d more than $20,000 last year in scholarshi­ps and follows the law regarding how much

money raised needs to be given out. There was a board before, but mainly Cianci ran it, he added.

Turchetta said Friday he’d give the AP a recent tax form showing the changes, but hadn’t done so by Tuesday.

The most recent publicly available tax form covers the scholarshi­p fund in 2015, prior to the merger. It shows nearly 55% of the disburseme­nts were for contributi­ons and gifts and about 45% was spent on operating and administra­tive expenses. The largest gift listed went to the commerce associatio­n in Providence’s Federal Hill neighborho­od, which Cianci often frequented.

Charity evaluators look for at least 65% of disburseme­nts to be spent on contributi­ons,

said Christophe­r Ryan Jr., an expert on trusts who teaches at Roger Williams University School of Law in Bristol, Rhode Island.

For years, no money from the “Mayor’s Own Marinara Sauce” was donated to the scholarshi­p fund. A Cianci adviser told the AP in 2014 the sauce made $3 in income in total from 2009 to 2012.

 ??  ?? ‘Buddy’ Cianci
‘Buddy’ Cianci

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