Career
In the summer of 1948 at the age 13 Don began his acting career as Don Pietro by appearing in a number of major Hollywood productions including his first film The Boy with Green Hair with Robert Ryan and Pat O"Brien followed a year later by Mistress Mike with Dick Powell. In the 1950s there came a string of nice roles like Follow the Sun with Glenn Ford, The Gene Autry Show as Pepito Garcia and Girls in the Night with Harvey Lembeck.
In 1957 Don played a Page on an Ocean Liner in the film classic An Affair to Remember opposite Cary Grant.
By 1960 Don made a transition from the big screen to Don Pietro, Disc Jockey at KROG, Sonora, California where he began toying with various character voices while developling an on air persona that became one of the country"s most theatrically gifted air talents. In 1963 program director Guy Williams aka L.David Moorhead hired him for the all important early evening slot at legendary top forty rocker, KRIZ. Using the air name "The Purple Pizza Eater", Don along with his sidekick Bruno J. Grunion, a mythical teenage ne"er-do-well voiced by Pietro (unbeknownst to the listening teen audience, the two garnered huge ratings in the Phoenix market and his reputation as an on air entertainer began capturing national attention and the management of Saint Louis giant, KXOK-Department of Administration and Management 630.
The throngs of teens calling the station"s request lines with their problems or dedications could simply, "Blab it to the Rabbitt." From 1964 through 1968 Don Pietro would enjoy some of the highest ratings ever recorded to date in the Saint Louis market. Upon Pietromonaco"s departure from KXOK in 1969, Don and Bruno returned once again to Phoenix and KRIZ Radio this time for the 3-7 Prime Minister Drive slot where he would earn Billboard Magazine"s coveted Major Market Performer of the Year award.
KRIZ would be his last job as a Disc Jockey and for him and Bruno, the end of era.
In 2001, Don Pietromonaco would be inducted into the Saint Louis Radio Hall of Fame. After his departure from live radio in 1971, Pietromonaco began teaching film production and voiceovers in Hollywood, as well as voicing numerous commercials. At the age of 61, Don Pietromonaco, actor and veteran voiceover coach, died from complications due to emphysema.
He once sent a film clip to the children"s show The Banana Splits entitled "People’s Cop".
This was a sped-up depiction of a policeman directing traffic at a Saint Louis intersection, and the name "Pietromonaco" can be seen on a street sign at the beginning. During his days at KXOK in Saint Louis, Pietromonaco helped raise several million dollars for medical research.
The "People’s Cop" in the Banana Splits video was Owen Dacey, a popular 5th District motorcycle traffic officer in the Hyde Park area of North Saint Louis. The clip shows him at the intersection of North Grand Avenue & North Broadway.
He was known to locals as the "Dancing Cop".