John Wallowitch
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John Wallowitch is an American composer, songwriter and cabaret performer. He has written over 1,000 songs; his works include Bruce (a favorite standard in Blossom Dearie's repertoire), I See the World Through Your Eyes, Back on the Town, and Mary's Bar. He is also known for his sophisticated takes on the songs of Irving Berlin.
Wallowitch was born in the Methodist Hospital in South Philadelphia. He attended the Edgar Allan Poe Elementary School, Vare Junior High School, Central High School and Temple University in Philadelphia, and the Juilliard School in Manhattan. His first professional appearance was on the Lithuanian Furniture Company Radio Hour (Station WHAT) on which he rendered Irving Berlin's So Help Me.
For over 50 years he has played and sung a catalogue of original songs at nightspots around New York City.
Wallowitch spent his youth in a desolate neighborhood in South Philadelphia, dreaming about moving to New York. He finally arrived there in his late teens to study classical piano at Juilliard. In order to survive he played rehearsal piano for shows, among them Leonard Sillman's New Faces of '52, and began to play at the Duplex, a Greenwich Village saloon.
Wrote Stephen Holden in The New York Times: "While Noel Coward is no longer around to set the standards for a certain kind of sophisticated songwriting sensibility, Mr. Wallowitch nimbly carries the torch." He displays his predilection for Coward-like wit and satire on such songs as "Cosmetic Surgery", in which he sums up the surgical predilections of friends who are "getting younger than ever" with such dexterity.
- "In a matter of weeks
- With the modern techniques
- For improving physiques
- They have altered their beaks
- And they've lifted their cheeks
- And now everyone speaks
- In society's cliques
- Of the changes that science has wrought
- Of the changes that money has bought!"
He often writes about growing up in Philadelphia, and of life with his family. "I See the World Through Your Eyes" is a remembrance of Wallowitch's late brother, photographer Edward Wallowitch (associated with Andy Warhol). "Manhattan, You're A Dream" pays tribute to Wallowitch's mother.
During the 1960s he met three women who would become his greatest champions: singer-pianist Blossom Dearie; Dixie Carter of Designing Women, who recorded a collection of Wallowitch songs in 1984); and Joanne Beretta. Wallowitch's compositions have also been recorded by Shirley Horn, Tony Bennett, Berri Blair, John Dubois, Marlene VerPlanck, Lynn Lobban and many others.
Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Wallowitch was part of a popular cabaret act with his longtime partner, Bertram Ross. Wallowitch and Ross sang in nightspots ranging from London's Pizza on the Park to the Ballroom in New York City. A CD of their performance cabaret, “Wallowitch and Ross” (Miranda Music) was released in 2003 to accompany the documentary film of the couple, "Wallowitch & Ross: This Moment."
As a solo cabaret entertainer, Wallowitch has performed throughout the world and is famous for his long-running hit revue, The World of Wallowitch. He has won both the MAC and Bistro Awards for Composer of the Year.
Wallowitch wrote the song "Hillary Oh Hillary," for Hillary Clinton during her run for U.S. Senate, set to the tune of the old Groucho Marx song, "Lydia Oh Lydia". He was inspired to write it after Clinton's six-hour long visit to his New York studio where he performed for the former first lady.
John Wallowitch lives and performs in New York City.
[edit] Discography
- (1964) LP This Is John Wallowitch!!!, featuring cover artwork by Andy Warhol. (Serenus Records)
- (1984) CD Back On The Town [LIVE], (DRG Label).
- (1993) CD My Manhattan, featuring Bertram Ross & Dixie Carter (DRG Label).
- (2002) CD Wallowitch & Ross, John Wallowitch & Bertram Ross.
- (1983) CD Dixie Carter Sings John Wallowitch Live at the Carlyle (DRG Label)
- (2003) CD Frankie and Johnny and Me Lynn Lobban performing the songs of John Wallowitch (LML Music)