The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Toy store FAO Schwarz makes its N.Y. comeback

- By Verena Dobnik

NEW YORK — Three years after it closed its beloved toy store on Fifth Avenue, FAO Schwarz is making a return to New York.

A new FAO opened Friday in Manhattan’s Rockefelle­r Center, about 10 blocks from its former home near Central Park.

For more than 150 years, FAO Schwarz was known in New York City for its classy and sometimes extravagan­tly expensive toys. The fantasylan­d store it opened on Fifth Avenue in 1986 was a tourist attraction, replete with its own theme song, doormen who looked like palace guards and a musical clock tower.

Financial problems at the parent company and rising rents closed that store in 2015, but FAO is now pulling back from the worst financial precipice since it was founded in 1862.

In recent weeks at 30 Rockefelle­r Plaza, workers drilled, hammered and sawed 24 hours a day to get the new store ready. Employees filled shelves with hundreds of plush animals that have long defined the brand — bears, bunnies, elephants, chicks and more. The big entrance clock tower has returned. And on the second level of the 20,000-square-foot space is a giant piano keyboard mat like the one on which Tom Hanks danced to “Heart and Soul” in the 1988 film “Big.”

The 20-foot-long instrument with 60 keys is reflected on the ceiling for people in the plaza below to see. Replicas for sale cost $128.

There is also a toy grocery store where children can shop among artificial produce, complete with small carts, a checkout counter and kitchen supplies. For $75, another interactiv­e station allows kids to adopt baby dolls, while a “nurse” gives lessons on how to care for them. Live magic shows are staged nearby, next to a spot for assembling custom remote-control cars. A 27-foot-tall rocket ship teems with stuffed bear astronauts.

“We are about experience­s. That’s what’s different from other toy stores,” said David Niggli, FAO’s chief merchandis­ing officer.

In a global marketing push, pop-up FAO shops are also opening for the holidays in England, Spain and Australia. A March rollout is planned for a permanent store at a mall in Beijing in addition to smaller retail locations in airports and elsewhere across the U.S. and Canada.

FAO Schwarz has gone through multiple corporate takeovers in recent years as retailers struggled to adapt to online sales. It was purchased in 2002 by Right Start Inc., which filed for bankruptcy twice. Toys R Us was the next owner. It sold the FAO name to California-based ThreeSixty Brands in 2016 before recently declaring bankruptcy itself.

FAO was founded in 1862 by German immigrant Frederick August Otto Schwarz, specializi­ng in highend toys, some imported from Europe. By the 20th century, in stores across the country, fancy items included a $1,500 jeweled Etch-A-Sketch and a Barbie-themed, hot pink foosball table for $25,000.

There are a few extravagan­t items to be had in the new store but plenty of modestly priced items, too.

“We have beautiful artisan pieces here, like rocking horses, but we also have items that are $10,” Niggli said. “There’s always going to be some of those overthe-top items. I think that’s part of what you come to FAO to see. It’s part of the magic.”

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An employee plays the FAO Premium Piano Dance Mat during Tuesday’s media preview of the new FAO Schwarz store in New York. Replicas for sale cost $128.
MARY ALTAFFER / ASSOCIATED PRESS An employee plays the FAO Premium Piano Dance Mat during Tuesday’s media preview of the new FAO Schwarz store in New York. Replicas for sale cost $128.

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