This winter
Peter Yawitz ’80’s cabaret act won an award from
New York cabaret, jazz, and comedy critics. (wireimage.com)
Corporate by day, cabaret by
night Musical comedian Peter Yawitz ’80 makes fun of working
stiffs
Preschool admissions interviews. Overzealous soccer dads. The
inanities of corporate lingo. Such topics are fodder for small talk
at Reunions, but if you’re Peter Yawitz ’80, they are
much more than that. The ins and outs of being a family man earning
a living in corporate America form the basis of his cabaret act,
A New Man, which finished its run in Manhattan this spring
and won the 2005 Nightlife Award for Outstanding Musical Comedy
Performance. The award was presented by New York cabaret, jazz,
and comedy critics.
Yawitz writes or co-writes the lyrics to most of his songs, which
reflect his own everyday experiences: “At my wife’s
class reunion, like dutiful lackeys/The husbands are dumped/I’m
with bald guys in khakis.” Other songs crack the code of male-to-male
communication and parody the annual ordeal of workplace performance
evaluations. Cabaret is not what Yawitz predicted he’d be
doing nearly 25 years after graduating with a psychology degree,
determined to make his mark in business. But that is, after all,
the point: The theme of the show is one of transformation and self-acceptance
as a husband, father of two, and provider. His day job is running
the corporate communications firm, Clear Communication, he founded
in the 1990s.
Yawitz acted in school plays as a kid, but focused on other things
at Princeton. “I was determined to be serious,” he says.
Post-M.B.A. stints in real estate weren’t entirely satisfying,
so he started acting in amateur productions at night. He wondered
if performing was his calling. Then his job at the real-estate division
of a savings and loan association ended, giving him the opportunity
to audition and perform full time. His wife, Carol Phethean ’81,
encouraged him. After a few years, the peripatetic (and cash-poor)
life of a performer wore thin. He returned to business and started
his communications firm. But he never lost the acting bug and several
years ago, he took a cabaret workshop.
A New Man evolved from those initial efforts. With the
award and successful runs under his belt, he hopes to land more
gigs. “Now, when people ask me what I do, I say I do two things,”
he says.
By Katherine Hobson ’94
Katherine Hobson ’94 covers science and medicine at
U.S. News & World Report.