It’s sad news that the famous FAO Schwarz toy store in New York City is set to close its doors in July. Even though Schwarz never took Electric Football to heart like retailers Sears, Montgomery Ward, and JC Penney, and that most of us never had the opportunity to wander those hallowed Manhattan aisles, there is something poignant about the store’s demise.
On occasion while growing up in the 1960’s the FAO Schwarz catalog would arrive in my family’s mailbox. Compared to Sears and Wards, it was exotic, with cars you could drive and other expensive playsets and toys that where well beyond what my family could afford. I knew and accepted that, never asking for anything from the FAO Schwarz catalog. But I kept those catalogs and would still go through them from time. There was just something about the “possibility” offered by the eclectic FAO Schwarz line. It made it clear that there was “more” out there in the way of toys than I ever imagined.
That possibility of “more” was hammered home on a 1969 trip to Scotland when I turned a corner in an Edinburgh department store and ran smack into a Subbuteo Table Soccer Display. Within an hour we were in the store’s shipping office having a Subbuteo game — with battery operated floodlights! — sent back to my tiny house in Pennsylvania.
Without a doubt it’s this “more” element that inspired us to: play tape-recored NFL television theme music before kicking-off our games; cut NFL player names out of TV Guides for the backs of our Tudor NFL players; build stadiums, keep stats, collect teams and games; make Electric Football as realistic as possible through painting, molding, and tweaking.
Many claim that Schwarz’ special aura has long since disappeared, along with all the other independent mom and pop toy stores that once populated the toy world. Yet it’s still sad whenever and however the spirit of “possibility” fades from view. Perhaps that’s why we work so hard to keep it alive in Electric Football.
Earl