Hello, Dolly! 鈥� Set in the 1890s, this is another great New York musical whose locations are now mostly history. During this period midtown and upper Manhattan were still mainly suburban places gradually turning into city. City life centered around 14th Street. In 鈥淏efore the Parade Passes By,鈥� Dolly says, 鈥淚 went away from the lights of 14th Street, and into my personal haze鈥�.鈥� Mrs. Molloy鈥檚 millinery (hat) shop is on the thoroughfare, which is also the backdrop of the 14th Street Parade sequence. The Castle Garden show referred to in 鈥淒ancing鈥� is a reference to a theatre that operated at the old Castle Clinton in Battery Park from 1824 until World War II. It was also the site of the New York Aquarium mentioned in On the Town. The model for the Harmonia Gardens restaurant where galloping waiters sing the title song was Luchow鈥檚, at 110 East 14th Street, a block from Union Square. This German-American feasting hall was considered the last word in epic Teutonic dining from 1882 to 1982. The building burned down in 1994 and the legendary site is now occupied by a nondescript Wells Fargo bank. Tony Pastor was one of the founders of the entertainment form that came to be known as Vaudeville. Pastor was connected with a number of different NY theatres, including 鈥�444,鈥� located at 444 Broadway near Grand Street. Perhaps his best-known space, and the one likely referred to in the lyric 鈥淲e鈥檒l join the Astors at Tony Pastor鈥檚鈥� was likely Pastor鈥檚 Theatre on Union Square itself, at the old Germania Theatre next to Tammany Hall at 100 East 17th Street. Another restaurant mentioned in the show, Delmonico鈥檚, was located at 2 South William Street, but is long gone. Fans of the Hello, Dolly! movie may want to travel 40 minutes north on the Hudson line of the Metro North commuter railroad to the Garrison station, which stood in for Yonkers when they shot the 鈥淧ut on Your Sunday Clothes鈥� sequence.