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Throughout the years, the 153-year-old store has become embedded in popular culture.
FAO Schwarz was founded by German immigrant Frederick August Otto Schwarz.
His first store launched in 1962 in Baltimore, and it was called Toy Bazaar.
He relocated to New York City in 1870, where he opened another store, which according to FAO's history, was called "Schwarz Brothers - Importers."
By 1876, popularity surged and he opened another store.
FAO Schwarz also launched one of the first ever mail-order
By 1900, the store changed its name to FAO Schwarz.
It was the ultimate toy store with top-notch and larger-than-life toys - where even Nintendo premiered its Nintendo Entertainment System, as Mental Floss noted.
The store inhabited several locations throughout New York City, but the store that people know, love, and are saying goodbye to moved to its famous flagship location in 1986, according to Bloomberg.
Most famously, the store was featured in the 1988 movie "Big," when Tom Hanks danced upon the famous large floor piano while playing "Heart and Soul."
Rich Kareckas/AP Images
The famous New York flagship reopened on Thanksgiving that year. The New York Times noted the store underwent a massive redesign, too.
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The store is also known for its over-the-top displays and actors who perform as characters.
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Diane Bondareff/Invision for PEEPS/AP Images
"This was probably one of the only ways to save FAO Schwarz," toy industry analyst Chris Byrne told Crain's New York that year. "It solidifies Toys 'R' Us as the leading specialty toy retailer in the nation, and it adds a jewel in their crown-they'll get more specialty brands."
In May 2015, Bloomberg reported FAO would shut down its flagship location, citing high rents as a major source of trouble.
The piano still exists, and people have continued to dance upon it.
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