Dog eats groom-to-be's passport weeks before international wedding

Chickie's owners say they're optimistic their wedding in Italy won't be ruined.

Dog eats groom-to-be's passport weeks before international wedding
WCVB
August 21, 2023, 9:01 AM

You've likely heard of the excuse "My dog ate my homework!" but for one Boston couple, "My dog ate my passport!" is the reason behind some of their wedding stress.

Donato Frattaroli told ABC News' Danny New he noticed his passport had ended up on his golden retriever Chickie's bed and it looked to be in less-than-mint condition.

PHOTO: Chickie the dog chewed on multiples pages of his owner's passport, days before he is scheduled to leave for his Italy wedding.
Chickie the dog chewed on multiples pages of his owner's passport, days before he is scheduled to leave for his Italy wedding. Chickie is a one-year-old golden retriever who lives with Donato Frattaroli and his fiancee in Boston.
WCVB

It turned out 1-year-old Chickie, whose name is short for Chicken Cutlet, had gotten ahold of his owner's blue booklet and chewed through multiple pages of Frattaroli's passport, weeks before he and his fiancee Magda Mazri are supposed to fly to Italy for their Aug. 31 wedding reception.

According to Frattaroli, Chickie the dog chewed on multiples pages of his passport, days before he is scheduled to leave for his Italy wedding.
WCVB

"She kinda knew what she did and all of a sudden, she got really cuddly, you know, head on the lap kind of thing," Frattaroli said.

Donato Frattaroli is supposed to get married to his fiancee on Aug. 31 in Italy.
WCVB

Mazri told ABC News she reached out to their local congressional representatives, including Rep. Stephen Lynch and Sen. Edward Markey of Massachusetts, for assistance and the couple are hopeful Frattaroli can possibly get a new passport in time to make their Italian wedding dreams come true.

Donato Frattaroli is hoping to get a new passport after his dog Chickie chewed on it just days before he is scheduled to leave for his Italy wedding, with his fiancee Magda Mazri.
ABC News

"I'm optimistic it's going to work out," Mazri said.

The couple told Boston ABC affiliate WCVB that if Frattaroli's passport replacement doesn't come in time, Mazri and their wedding guests will travel to Italy without Frattaroli and he'll welcome them all home when they return to the U.S. afterward.