Luxury Event Entertainment at Evercore’s Park City Client Dinner
As a corporate mentalist, I’ve gotten to bring luxury event entertainment into a pretty wide range of rooms – from a private royal dinner in Georgetown to Fortune 100 executive retreats on the Pebble Beach coast. In February 2026, Evercore added a new one to that list: an intimate client dinner up in the mountains of Park City, Utah.
About the Event
Evercore is a leading independent investment bank. For this evening, they hosted roughly 55 of their senior leaders and key clients at a private dining venue near St. Regis Deer Valley – the kind of room where everyone already knows each other’s last quarter and most of their last decade.
The format was confident and unhurried: cocktails and canapés at six, a sit-down dinner at seven-thirty, and entertainment to close the night at nine.
My Role at the Event
I came in to deliver the after-dinner performance – a tailored mentalism set built specifically for an intimate, sharp, end-of-the-night audience. For a room like this, the wrong move is to lean on volume or spectacle. The right move is to slow it down, make every moment feel personal, and let the impossible land in the quiet.
We also custom-printed decks of playing cards for the evening – a small touch that ties the entertainment to the host. Cards like that do two things at once. They make a finale feel inevitable when the whole room reveals the same impossible outcome, and they go home in each guest’s pocket as something to remember the night by.
Why Luxury Event Entertainment Works for a Client Dinner
A client dinner isn’t a conference. It isn’t a sales pitch. It’s a thank-you, a relationship investment, and a story your clients will tell for months afterward. The right kind of luxury event entertainment makes that story possible. Done well, it can:
- Set a tone of curiosity and warmth before the formal program ever starts
- Create a shared “did you see that?” moment among guests who might not otherwise have met
- Reinforce the host’s taste and care without anyone having to say a word about it
- Send every guest home with one specific moment they’ll repeat at the next dinner
That last one matters more than most hosts realize. The best client dinners pay you back in conversations the host wasn’t even in the room for.
Watch the Show
[VIDEO LINK]
A short highlight reel from the evening – the closing moments and a few of the cleanest reactions of the night. You’ll get a feel for what luxury event entertainment looks like when it’s been built around the room, not dropped into it.
Takeaways
A few things stood out from this one:
- Restraint is the move at high-end dinners. The audience didn’t need to be impressed – they needed to be surprised. There’s a difference, and a room like this rewards the one that respects it.
- Customization signals more than it costs. The custom decks weren’t the most expensive part of the night, but they were the part guests took home in their pockets.
- A familiar face in a strange room is a quiet kind of magic. One of the guests recognized me from a private event in Washington, D.C. months earlier – a small reminder that the corporate world is a smaller dinner table than it looks.
- The best entertainment doesn’t try to be the point of the dinner. It exists in service of the host’s relationship with their guests. That’s the whole job.
Planning Your Own Client Dinner?
If you’re putting together a private dinner, leadership retreat, or any small-group evening where the bar is set high, I’d love to learn more about it. Luxury event entertainment is at its best when it’s shaped to the room, the host, and the guests – and I treat every one of these nights that way. Use the form below to get in touch, and we’ll talk through what would actually fit your night.


