Ciao! Promoter is all about pride, entertainment



           Published: Sunday, February 8, 2009                                                                        By Guy D’Astolfo

           Tony Trolio wants to give recognition to deserving members of the Valley’s Italian community.


                                                                Tony Trolio’s desk sits in the back room of his store, Trolio’s T-Shirts.        
                                                                Festooned with red, white and green — the colors of the Italian flag —                                 
                                                                it is surrounded by photos of show business folks Trolio has met over 
                                                                the years. There are cast members from “the Sopranos” and “the 
                                                                Godfather,” adorned with autographs and personal notes, as well as
                                                                assorted singers of lesser note. Noodles, his pet poodle (they got him 
                                                                after Spags died), saunters around the stacks of inventory, sticking his
                                                                nose into the office to inspect a visitor. It’s from this cozy corner that
                                                                Trolio runs not only his custom T-shirt and sportswear store, but also 
                                                                his Italian entertainment business, Ciao Promotions. Founded 14 yrs
                                                                ago, Ciao does two dinner-shows each year, and several more Las
                                                               Vegas-style shows, featuring acts like Ricci Martin, the Gaylords, the
                                                                Rat Pack, Sonny Geraci and the Van-Dells. The company motto is 
                                                                “Italians Promoting Italians,” and every year at his spring dinner show
                                                                an Italian man and woman of the year are honored.

   
   Trolio got his start in the promotions business as the volunteer entertainment chairman at various events
    His first venture was a Poland youth league football team fundraiser in 1972. The show, “Italy American
   Style,” was held at Stambaugh Auditorium and drew 800 people. From 1985 to 1991, Trolio and his late wife, 
   JoAnn, and their daughter, Sherry, ran Jester’s Comedy Club in Liberty.


    He served as entertainment chairman of the Greater Youngstown Italian Festival from 1991 to 1997. The
   next year, he took over as chairman of the Our Lady of Mount Carmel Italian Festival, a volunteer job that he
    still holds. The Mount Carmel fest raised more than $80,000 in profit for the church last year.

    In an area with an unusually large amount of Italian festivals, Trolio is the undisputed go-to guy. In addition 
    to his work with Mount Carmel and Ciao, he also does promotional work for the Warren Italian Festival and
    the Brier Hill Festival. His reputation extends beyond the Mahoning Valley. Up until it closed two years ago, 
    he was involved in the giant Pittsburgh Italian Festival at Station Square, as well as the inaugural Italian 
    Fest at Mountaineer Park.

     But despite the work he puts in, Trolio views it as a hobby and not a job. Financially, he’s happy to break 
     even.

    “I remember when I was a kid growing up on Brier Hill,” said Trolio, referring to the city’s one-time Italian
     neighborhood. “The old folks would come out to festivals with canes. You couldn’t keep them away, they 
     loved it so much. I want to keep that going. As long as it’s a [financial] wash, I will keep doing it. These are
     my people and this is my music.”

     Trolio started Ciao Promotions to fill a void in the entertainment scene. “The younger ones have plenty of 
     choices,” he said. “There are some occasional big-time shows, like Tony Bennett at $75 a ticket, but a lot 
     of our attendees are on a fixed income and can’t afford too many events like that. I asked myself, ‘what are
     these people supposed to do?’ I wanted to bring them entertainment at affordable prices, someplace to go 
     and see first-class entertainment and have dinner for less than $40 per person. We’ve done that.”

     His Vegas-style shows average around 300 attendees, with more than 100 of them younger people. “They
     want to continue the tradition,” said Trolio. Joey Naples, a Girard school teacher, is the master of 
     ceremonies at the shows.

     The author of three autobiographical books about growing up in Youngstown, Trolio still holds the pride in 
     his city and his heritage that his parents instilled in him and his siblings. His T-shirt shop is divided into 
     three segments: Poland High School, Youngstown State University and Italy.

     Ciao Promotions’ Man and Woman of the Year awards are a sign of his pride. “I wanted to do something 
     good for Italians,” he said. “They get a bad rap — all you ever hear about are the gangsters. There are a lot
     of local people doing things that people don’t know about and this is a way of saying ‘hey, we know what 
     you are doing’.”
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