Battle Between Cianci Family with Trinity Rep and "The Prince of Providence" Author Heats Up

GoLocalProv News Team

Battle Between Cianci Family with Trinity Rep and "The Prince of Providence" Author Heats Up

L-R Mike Stanton (PHOTO_UConn), Buddy Cianci (PHOTO Richard McCaffrey), Artin Coloian (PHOTO Facebook)
The dispute between the members of the Cianci family -- along with members of the board of the late Mayor’s foundation -- with Trinity Rep and author of the bestseller The Prince of Providence heated up on Wednesday.

Cianci allies have criticized Trinity Rep for producing a stage adaptation of Mike Stanton's book about Cianci. The play is scheduled to open in September of this year.

Stanton, who wrote the book during Buddy Cianci's federal trial in the early 2000s, defends the book’s depiction of the two-time convicted felon and the longest-serving Providence Mayor. Stanton tells GoLocal, “I’m thrilled that Trinity Rep is adapting The Prince of Providence. The play and book, while different, both take a balanced look at the fascinating Jekyll-Hyde persona of Buddy Cianci.”

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“When I researched my book, I spoke to numerous people who were close to him over the years, friend and foe, allies and enemies, and some people who shifted from one camp to the other and back again over his long career. Although Buddy, not surprisingly, did not like the idea of my doing a book, we did spend a lot of time together. I also spent a lot of time with his onetime top aide, Artin Coloian,” Stanton said.

“Buddy’s story has endured…The Prince of Providence is more relevant than ever today as our society wrestles with flawed, charismatic political leaders. Just this past Sunday, when Matt Bai compared Donald Trump to Buddy Cianci on 'Meet The Press,' Chuck Todd didn’t ask, 'Who’s Buddy?' He just laughed,” added Stanton who today is a professor of journalism at the University of Connecticut and a contributor to the Boston Globe.

A spokesperson for Trinity Rep said in a statement to GoLocal, “Trinity Rep did contact a representative for the family in advance of the season announcement, and news of our commission of the play was announced publicly in March 2018.”

Dr. Brad Turchetta, Cianci's nephew
Family Disputes Theater's Claims

Brad Turchetta, Cianci’s nephew and spokesman for the family, disputes Trinity Rep's claims.

“Trinity has not spoken to anyone in the family and certainly not to me. I have not heard from anyone from Trinity…this is insulting," said Turchetta. 

Cianci had twice used city financing to keep the theater from closing -- and Trinity Rep admits that they knew that the Cianci family would not be pleased with the production.

“We understand that Buddy and his family are not fans of Mr. Stanton's book, but the play and the book are distinct works. We believe the dramatization by George Brant based on the book to be a fair and balanced look at the highs and lows of Buddy's life and leadership. He’s a really significant figure in Trinity Rep’s history, as he was for Providence,” said Trinity Rep in a statement.

On Monday night Turchetta told GoLocal, “It is disappointing to see Trinity produce this play based on a book Buddy didn’t like and is a misrepresentation of him. It seems as though Trinity has a very short memory in terms of what Buddy did for Trinity.  His ability to engineer a loan for them to keep them afloat -- Trinity wouldn’t exist without Buddy. It’s a shame to see such disrespect.”

Trinity Rep did not respond to questions about who in the Cianci family the theater company had spoken to.

Vincent "Buddy" Cianci
Not the Only Dispute

Former Cianci Chief of Staff Artin Coloian, a critic of Stanton’s book, reaffirmed his criticism of the book and the sourcing. “I was never interviewed for the book,” said Coloian.

Stanton, who covered the Cianci administration as a reporter for the Providence Journal tells GoLocal, “Art & I spoke often throughout Plunder Dome and afterward. I was simultaneously covering the case for the ProJo and researching the book, which everyone knew about and Artie frequently busted my chops about. We spoke by phone or I’d stop by his office at City Hall. Was he secretive? Yes. Did he tell me everything? No. Did he confess to knowing about corruption at City Hall? Hell, no. Often, he was doing reconnaissance for Buddy, trying to find out what I knew, trying to figure out who my sources were.”

“I suppose in fairness to Art, he never 'formally' cooperated. Neither did Buddy. But I learned a lot from being around them and talking to them in the three-plus years that Plunder Dome played out,” Stanton added.

Cianci and Coloian have repeatedly criticized Stanton’s book and Cianci, after being released from jail, wrote his own book, “Politics and Pasta: A Memoir.”

In 2003, Coloian wrote a critique of the book in the now-closed Providence Phoenix, 'The Many Faces of Cianci: The Journal’s Jihad by Artin Coloian.' He resubmitted the piece to GoLocal at the time of Cianci's death.

“The Prince of Providence is a story woven directly from the pages of the Providence Journal. It reads like a chronology of Journal stories. If a high school student turned in a paper like The Prince, he would undoubtedly be brought to the principal’s office for submitting someone else’s work. It is very possible that Mike Stanton cut and pasted his way, putting his book together in the Journal archives, using news accounts directly from an array of reporters’ stories of the mayor’s public and private life. He thanks many of his Journal colleagues for their stories. I wonder if he will be sharing his advance with them. He owes them that much,” wrote Coloian.


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