tummler

Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

  • noun One, such as a social director or entertainer, who encourages guest or audience participation.
  • noun One who incites others to action.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

  • noun An employee - usually male - of a Catskill Mountains resort charged with the duty of entertaining guests throughout the day by providing any number of services, from comedian to master of ceremonies.
  • noun A lively, puckish man.

Examples

  • Part resident comic, part activities director, part hotel cheerleader, the tummler - derived from the Yiddish word for noisemaker - was expected to field guest complaints, organize talent shows, jump into the pool fully clothed or dash screaming through the lobby pursued by a knife-wielding chef.

    Bull Moose

  • I was going to say Abe Rosenthal called me a tummler, which is Yiddish for a sort of mover and shaker.

    The Girls in the Balcony: Women, Men, and the New York Times

  • As in previous shows, she re-creates a Sophie Tucker routine, "Max From the Income Tax," which ostensibly is about economic chaos but reveals more about her fascination with Tucker, a Jewish tummler who for 60 years made herself the butt literally of her own jokes about being a zaftig farbissina.

    Highlights and Dark Nights

  • To put patients at ease, he banters like a borscht-belt tummler, delivering a stream of corny old jokes.

    A Touch of Grace:

  • A tummler, on the other hand, would be hired for their social skills, their ability to communicate, teach and explain, and their knowledge of the different tools and how they work.

    Comments from all Computer Weekly blogs

  • In a way, a good social media consultant acts as a tummler-by-proxy, encouraging their clients to adopt more sociable thinking patterns, but they can only do so much.

    Comments from all Computer Weekly blogs

Note

The word 'tummler' comes ultimately from the Yiddish word 'tumlen', "to make a racket".