.png)
Build business-ready branded videos and presentations in minutes - for any need, in any style. Doc-to-video, AI avatars, text-to-speech, AI translation, and more. Fully compliant, secure by design, built for scale and impact.
Transform your documents & ideas into crisp videos, maintain full creative control and make them unmistakably yours.
Pick from 100s of free video templates, fully customized and tailored to you.

Meet the highest security standards with ISO-27001 certification, GDPR compliance, accessibility features, and user management tools that keep your data, media, and team protected.

Maintain brand consistency with shared folders, corporate templates, and brand locking. Streamline teamwork with built-in reviews, approvals, and a centralized brand book.

The Powtoon Propel program is designed to help your organization and team scale video creation with dedicated success managers, onboarding, creative services, and tailored training.

Power worldwide organizational reach with personalized, localized content. Powtoon Enterprise includes AI-powered translation tools, text-to-speech, closed captions, lip sync, and diverse avatars.

Effortless video creationBring your ideas to life – no design skills needed. Powtoon makes storytelling simple and impactful.

Work smarter, not harderCreate stunning videos in minutes with time-saving tools that do the heavy lifting for you.

Maximize engagement across the boardTurn heads and keep audiences hooked with videos that stand out on any platform.















Odesa in Pepi’s youth was a city of displaced identities: runaway serfs, bankrupt nobles, Talmudic scholars who had discovered secularism, and women who had discovered freedom. The Yiddish theater, born just a few years before Pepi in neighboring Iași (Romania), found its rowdy, irreverent home in Odesa. Unlike the pious shtetls of the Pale of Settlement, Odesa allowed a woman to play a man playing a lover. It allowed gender to become a prop.
Today, Odesa’s grand opera house still stands, though its Jewish theater district is a memory of cobblestones. But every so often, in the repertory of a Tel Aviv fringe company or a queer Yiddish revival in Berlin, someone performs the mirror scene. And for two minutes, Pepi Litman is resurrected in the space between a man’s bow tie and a woman’s wink. pepi litman male impersonator birthplace ukrainian city
Pepi (née Perel) Litman was born in the 1870s in what was then the Russian Empire’s most glamorous and lawless port. Odesa was a place where Italian opera houses sat across from Moldovan wine cellars, where Greek smugglers dined next to Hasidic merchants. It was a city of masks. So perhaps it was inevitable that it would produce a woman who made her living by removing one mask and putting on another. Odesa in Pepi’s youth was a city of
Pepi’s most famous bit was a mirror scene. She would appear as a bashful young maiden, be courted by a male actor, then flee backstage. Seconds later, “he” would emerge—the same face, now in a waistcoat—and begin flirting with the same man’s wife. The audience would scream with the cognitive dissonance. One body, two genders, three corners of a love triangle. It allowed gender to become a prop
In the collective memory of Yiddish theater, the name Pepi Litman is a ghost wrapped in a tuxedo. She is a footnote in a footnote: a woman famous for pretending to be a man, born in a city famous for pretending to be many things.
Join over 50 million
people using Powtoon