Passing go and collecting smiles: 'Monopoly man' brings a chance for joy to sick kids

PROVIDENCE − Vincent Marzullo stood on the sidewalk along Dudley Street as harried drivers hurried past Monday afternoon, when one motorist stopped and rolled down her window.

“Are you the Monopoly Man?” she asked.

He said he was.

“Can I take your picture?” she asked.

Vin Marzullo works as a volunteer at Hasbro Children's Hospital in Providence, shown in the background. Folks think he looks like "Rich Uncle" Pennybags (Milburn Pennybags), the cartoon mascot for the Monopoly board game, so he's decided to go with it. “If the Monopoly Man makes them smile," he says, "I can’t shut it down.”
Vin Marzullo works as a volunteer at Hasbro Children's Hospital in Providence, shown in the background. Folks think he looks like "Rich Uncle" Pennybags (Milburn Pennybags), the cartoon mascot for the Monopoly board game, so he's decided to go with it. “If the Monopoly Man makes them smile," he says, "I can’t shut it down.”

Almost as quickly as the photo op began, it ended, as she snapped a couple of images, pulled into traffic and drove away.

That was hardly unusual for Marzullo, who more than a few people think bears a strong resemblance to Milburn "Rich Uncle" Pennybags, the official cartoon mascot of the Monopoly board game.

Marzullo often enhances the likeness by wearing a hat, tie and vest reminiscent of the character, almost every day and everywhere. “If the Monopoly Man makes them smile, I can’t shut it down,” said Marzullo. “No matter where I go, I get stopped. I go to the PC games in Madison Square Garden, they put me up on the Jumbotron. People stop me in the aisle at Shaw’s, they want to take a picture of me.”

Marzullo, 76, is retired after half a century in government work at county, state and federal levels.

“I’m in my encore,” he said. “I’m a free agent now.”

Helping sick kids smile at Hasbro Children's Hospital

Free agency includes volunteer work: On Sundays, he serves breakfast at the Matthewson Street United Methodist Church, where he also serves dinner on Fridays. On Wednesdays, he runs the bingo at The DaVinci Center. On Mondays, he entertains children at Hasbro Children's Hospital.

The Hasbro hospital gig stemmed from his government work when he got to know the folks at the Hasbro Foundation through his efforts organizing volunteers for a federal program. He retired in 2015 but found himself at the hospital two years later when his granddaughter needed eye surgery.

Seeing what went on at the hospital in 2017 came at the right time in his life.

“It was an epiphany at that point,” he said. “I was looking for meaningful volunteer work. It just immediately made sense.”

So, he got in touch with his contact at the foundation and signed up to volunteer at the hospital.

But one other thing was also going on in his life back then.

Uncle Pennybags lookalike grows his mustache and his heart

“At that time I had let my mustache grow, and I had been a collector of hats,” he said. “People looked at me and started calling me Monopoly Man.”

He figured the look could work well when he volunteered at the hospital and said there was talk of sending him to mascot school and getting a tailor to assemble a proper Monopoly Man outfit. But then, according to Marzullo, the lawyers got involved and nixed the idea.

Hospital spokeswoman Elena Falcone-Relvas declined to discuss Marzullo's Monopoly Man persona, citing trademark concerns, but said, "We appreciate Mr. Marzullo’s creativity and time volunteering with our patients.”

“I have a blessed life,” says Vincent Marzullo, in character at Hasbro Children's Hospital.
“I have a blessed life,” says Vincent Marzullo, in character at Hasbro Children's Hospital.

“I’m the volunteer assigned to the playroom,” said Marzullo. “I’ll either play games with them or bring them crafts, Play-Doh, electronics,” he said. “The medical staff will use me when they’re treating a child to sort of distract them, and lessen the stress and the tensions.”

Marzullo, who describes himself as “a white guy from Brooklyn” who now lives in West Warwick, came to Rhode Island more than 50 years ago to attend Providence College, where he met and married his wife of 53 years, Josephine.

“I have a blessed life,” he said.

That includes having become the Monopoly Man, although Hasbro – neither the hospital nor the corporation – will acknowledge that aspect of his life.

A Hasbro Children's Hospital menu in the likeness of a Monopoly board with images of Milburn Pennybags, "Rich Uncle" Pennybags.
A Hasbro Children's Hospital menu in the likeness of a Monopoly board with images of Milburn Pennybags, "Rich Uncle" Pennybags.

So just call it a coincidence that the menu from which kids order food when they're patients at the hospital features "Rich Uncle" Pennybags and a Monopoly board.

This article originally appeared on The Providence Journal: 'Monopoly Man' volunteers at Hasbro Children's Hospital