The appeal of PEZ

Colorful museum attracts youths, young-at-heart with nostalgic candy

? Only about a yardstick high, Andrew O’Toole dashes back and forth with a fiery energy, shouting the names of his favorite superheroes.

“Spider-Man! A Ninja Turtle! … Batman!” he cries, his father shuffling alongside him.

Andrew is stalking every corner of the recently opened Easton Museum of PEZ, a cotton-candy colored world of PEZ products that can captivate young and old alike. The museum is just paces away from The Crayola Factory, another childhood playground where kids learn how crayons are made.

Some 1,500 PEZ dispensers, all nestled in creative landscapes, fill the museum. Disney PEZ sit in a 10-foot-high castle. Halloween-themed PEZ are displayed in a haunted house. And psychedelic PEZ are set beside a real Volkswagen Beetle that appears to be crashing through the wall.

Owners Kevin and Tim Coyle hope to entice some of the 400,000 or so yearly Crayola visitors to turn left out of the crayon factory and walk 30 seconds down a mural-filled alley to visit their shrine to the hand-held candy dispensers.

And if 4-year-old Andrew is the Coyles’ typical customer, then the brothers have a hit on their hands.

“We were at the Crayola Factory and he wasn’t nearly as excited,” said Andrew’s father, Kevin O’Toole, of Garden City, N.J. “Plus they did a really good job. Everything’s at eye level for kids.

“You know what made me laugh when I came in?” O’Toole asked. “I had that Hulk one when I was little, and then you look at the price.”

The Hulk PEZ that O’Toole was referring to was priced at about $75 — and that’s on the inexpensive end for rare PEZ dispensers. One of the more expensive PEZ the Coyles have on display is a baseball glove, ball and bat PEZ from the 1960s. It’s valued at $400.

Childhood favorites -- including Pebbles, Mickey Mouse and SpongeBob Squarepants -- are among the faces on PEZ dispensers at the new Easton Museum of PEZ in Easton, Pa. The museum is filled with about 1,500 dispensers, in unique and colorful displays.

Even that is not overly expensive. Collectors on eBay push prices for ultrarare PEZ into the thousands. That rare PEZ dispensers can command such high prices is one demonstration of a recent surge in PEZ’s popularity.

Nostalgia fuels interest

Jill Cohen has run the PEZAMANIA collectors convention in the Cleveland area for more than a decade. The first event attracted only a couple dozen people. Now considered the premier PEZ convention by collectors, the convention can attract more than a thousand fans.

“Now I have to get the biggest ballroom in Cleveland,” Cohen said. “I’ve outgrown three hotels.”

Interest in PEZ has spiked in the last decade, fueled by a nostalgia for childhood toys and the Internet.

“For me it combines the two favorite elements of childhood — that’s toys and candy,” Cohen said.

Location: 15-19 Bank St., Easton, Pa.Hours: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday; closed in January.Admission: $5 adults, $3 children, free 4 and under.Contact: Call (610) 253-9794 or visit www.eastonmuseumofpez.comNearby attractions: Crayola Factory and National Canal Museum, at Two Rivers Landing in Easton; open Tuesday through Sunday; admission to both facilities, $9; (610) 515-8000 or www.crayola.com.PEZ Candy Inc.:www.pez.comPEZ conventions: In Ohio, July 22-24, 2004, at the Holiday Inn in Independence (suburban Cleveland), www.pezamania.com; in Minnesota, Aug. 12-14, 2004, at the Ramada in Bloomington, www.mnpezcon.com/main.html.Burlingame Museum of PEZ Memorabilia: 214 California Drive, Burlingame, Calif., (650) 347-2301, spectrumnet.com/pez/

The Easton museum, which opened in mid-July, is already getting positive reviews on PEZ chat rooms, Cohen said. And one name widely known in PEZ circles — Shawn Peterson, author of the book “Collector’s Guide to PEZ” — called the museum “a great place.”

“The location just couldn’t be any better, and what they’ve done with it is really nice,” Peterson said.

“They’ve done a nice job with their displays, how they’ve got everything themed,” he said. “You may not see some rare things there, but they’ve probably got more work in their displays than anyone else.”

Displays track eras

PEZ, derived from the German word for peppermint — pfefferminz — was first produced for adult smokers more than 50 years ago in Austria. The bite-sized candies have been in the United States for about 50 years. The Orange, Conn.-based company says more than 3 billion PEZ candies are consumed annually in the United States.

The newly opened Easton Museum of PEZ is getting praise from visitors and in PEZ Internet chat rooms. The museum celebrates the bite-sized candies, which have been sold in the United States for about 50 years.

The Easton museum, which lays out the dispensers by era and genre, shows how the candies have changed over the years.

There are NFL PEZ and superheroes, Star Wars and Charlie Brown. Elton John and Santa Claus. There is also a “Where in the World is Waldo” game the brothers have set up on a wall display containing more than 500 dispensers.

Neither the Easton museum nor another PEZ museum in Burlingame, Calif., near San Francisco, is affiliated with the PEZ candy company.

“My brother and I have been joking to each other, ‘How do you like having $100,000 invested in plastic dolls?'” said Kevin Coyle, 37. “We could end up with a whole lot of Easter gifts.”

The brothers hope the PEZ museum gives people another reason to visit Easton, 50 miles north of Philadelphia.