Sons of Italy Charges 
Batavia School Play 
Stereotypes Italian Americans
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
            Washington, DC--
            
            
            
            November 7, 2006
            
            
            A play to be performed at the Rotolo Middle School 
this month stereotypes Italian Americans and 
is “most inappropriate entertainment” for children, 
charges the Sons of Italy Commission for Social 
Justice (CSJ), the anti-defamation arm of the Order 
Sons of Italy in America (OSIA), the oldest and 
largest Italian American organization in the United 
States.
            
        
        
    		The play, entitled “Fuggedaboudit,” subtitled “a little 
mobster comedy,” will be performed by the “Bada 
Bing Players” to the school’s children and their 
parents Nov. 17 and 18th.  It was written by 
Matthew Myers who teaches drama and 
communications at the school.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        Apparently inspired by the HBO series, The 
Sopranos, the play’s plot involves characters 
with Italian last names who are mobsters running an 
Italian restaurant while under surveillance by the 
FBI.  They speak ungrammatical English with heavy 
New York accents.
        
            In early October, a concerned parent whose child 
attends the school sent a copy of the play to OSIA’s 
national headquarters in Washington, D.C.   For more 
than three weeks, from October 10 through 
November 3,  OSIA, its anti-defamation arm, the CSJ 
as well as OSIA’s state chapter in Illinois, wrote and 
telephoned the Rotolo school principal, Dr. Donald 
McKinney as well as Dr. Jack 
Barshinger, superintendent of schools in Batavia, 
expressing serious concerns about the play’s 
stereotyping and requesting that the performances 
be cancelled.
        
            In response both Drs. McKinney and Barshinger 
denied that the play stereotyped Italian Americans 
and confirmed that it would be performed.  Dr. 
Barshinger said that the parent involved should 
schedule a “conflict resolution” meeting with the 
teacher, Matt Myers.
        
            Both officials also noted that since this is “a local 
issue” they would rather hear from local parents 
instead of “an organization in Washington, DC.”  
“We do not understand why they give greater weight 
to the complaints of ‘local’ people than to the biggest 
Italian American organization in the country,” says 
CSJ President Albert De Napoli, Esq.  “Would they 
ignore a complaint from the NAACP or the Jewish Anti-
Defamation League?  Ethnic stereotyping is 
unacceptable no matter who complains about it,” he 
says.
The CSJ and OSIA are “stunned” by the 
inappropriateness of the school officials’ response, De 
Napoli says.  “They surely would not allow Mr. Myers 
to put on a black-face Minstrel Show or a play that 
denigrated American Indians, Latinos or Jewish 
Americans,” he says.  “Why is it acceptable to cast 
characters of Italian heritage in such an unflattering 
light and present them to impressionable children?”
In an Oct. 18 letter to both Drs. Barshinger and 
McKinney, the Sons of Italy CSJ requested the 
following:
- 	An immediate cancellation and permanent 
retirement of  “Fuggeddaboudit.”
 
- 	Inclusion of Italian Americans in any of 
Rotolo School’s diversity day programs and 
ceremonies, stressing the many contributions that 
Italian Americans, the nation’s fifth largest ethnic 
group, have made to this nation.   
 
- 	The showing of a 30-minute documentary, 
Anti-Italianism created by Seton Hall 
University that outlines how Italian Americans have 
been stereotyped and discriminated against.  
 
The CSJ requests that the documentary be shown at 
a full faculty meeting of the Rotolo School as well as 
to the students and will provide the school with a 
copy.
	“We find this play offensive,” says 
Anthony 
Baratta, president of the Grand Lodge of Illinois, 
OSIA’s state chapter.  “And we intend to give our full 
support to the parents and students who object to 
it.  We will not give up until these performances are 
cancelled,” Baratta says.
Want to add your voice to ours? Email 
Superintendent of schools in Batavia, Dr. Jack 
Barshinger  
jack.barshinger@bps101.net
. Email Rotolo school 
principal, Dr. Donald McKinney at  
don.mckinney@bps101.net
.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            The Commission for Social Justice is the anti-
defamation arm of the Order Sons of Italy in America 
(OSIA), the largest and oldest national organization 
in the U.S. for men and women of Italian heritage.  
Founded in 1905, today OSIA has a network of more 
than 700 lodges or chapters coast to coast. 
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
         
        
        
        
        
        
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            Contact:
            
             Kylie Cafiero 
            
            Director of Communications 
            
            
            
            
                phone:
                202/547-2900
                 
            
            
            
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