Where to Celebrate Halloween in New York City

Everyone knows about Manhattan’s crazy Halloween party, New York’s Village Halloween Parade. Line up on 6th Avenue South of Spring Street and North of Canal Street at 6:30 pm and be prepared for a ghoulishly creative fest that tops anything throughout the country… with lots and lots and lots of people.

Here are some other Halloween events you might want to consider if you have kids or you don’t like being jostled:




Haunted Lantern Tours: Dress warmly and look out for the headless horsemen out there as you join the Urban Park Rangers for a lantern tour of the historic Water Battery at Fort Totten in Queens. The tour is from 6:30pm-8:30pm on Friday, October 29th.
Totten Avenue and Weaver Road, Queens, NY; 718-352-4793; http://www.nycgovparks.org/events/2010/10/29/haunted-lantern-tours

Thriller at the Battery: Add some time before or after your lantern tour and check out Thriller at the Battery, at the Fort Totten Visitor's Center. Bring your flashlight and explore a haunted shipwreck that comes to the park every Halloween.  The tour is also from 6:30pm-8:30pm on Friday, October 29th.
212th Street and Bell Boulevard, Queens; 718-352-1769; http://www.nycgovparks.org/events/2010/10/29/thriller-at-the-battery

BAMboo!: Brooklyn Academy of Music, America's oldest continuously operating performing arts center founded in 1861, celebrates its ninth annual Halloween festival. Get the requisite trick-or-treating out of the way and continue your afternoon of fun at BAM with candy giveaways, costume contests, storytelling, a haunted house maze, roaming entertainers, games, and more. This free event is from 2-5pm on October 31.
Lafayette Avenue between Ashland Place and Felix Street; 718-634-4100; http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=2763

Howl-o-ween: Dress your pooch up on October 31 and bring him or her to Canine Court in Van Cortlandt Park at Noon to compete in the annual costume competition and dog frolic. Registration is $10 per dog and $5 for each additional dog and benefits the dog run.
Broadway and 252nd Street; 718-796-4541; http://www.nycgovparks.org/events/2010/10/31/howloween

Thriller on the Bronx River: If trick-or-treating or parades aren't your thing, you can still spend the day outdoors. For an awesome alternative celebration, head up to 219th Street in your costume where you will begin your adventure canoeing through the Bronx River Forest past the Botanical Garden, ending up at the Bronx Zoo. Stay in your costume (if you haven't gotten wet from the ghouls and ghosts along the river) for the Halloween party at River Park in West Farms where you will enjoy a guided walk of a local cemetery and hear ghost stories.
*You must register if you would like to canoe in costume from 1130am-2pm at http://thrillerbxriver.eventbrite.com/ Canoe tickets start at $20.
Start at 219th, end at River Park (180th Street at Boston Road); 718-430-4614; http://www.bronxriver.org/?pg=content&p=calendarandnews&m1=54&month=10&year=2010&day=31 ; http://www.nycgovparks.org/events/2010/10/31/thriller-on-the-bronx-river

World Financial Center’s Screamin’ Green Halloween: This year go green for Halloween at the World Financial Center on October 30 from 12-4pm. Learn the true meaning behind “reduce, reuse, recycle” as artist-educators teach how to make fun costumes and masks with recycled materials or exchange last year’s costume for a new one at the Costume Swap. Test your bean toss skills at “Toss a Spider in the Brew” or your bowling skills at “Bowling for Ghosts” where players will aim to knock down repurposed soda bottles as pins. Don’t forget to go bobbing for apples either! Scared of Sunday’s crowds in The Village? Send the kids off in one of the mini parades led by the Hungry March Band at 1, 2, or 3pm. Leave the car keys and your subway passes behind and instead ride your bike to the event and enjoy free valet bicycle parking.
220 Vesey Street (World Financial Center Winter Garden); 212-945-0505 http://www.artsworldfinancialcenter.com/cgi-bin/Go.cgi?q_id=1080&q_scope=&q_archived_year=all&q_keywords=halloween

Boo at the Zoo: Hay mazes and pumpkin carving may be the norm for Halloween, but how about adding a Haunted Safari to this year’s celebrations? Head to the Bronx Zoo this weekend (October 30-31) for a series of events that will leave kids screaming for more. Better yet, children ages 3-12 in costume will receive a free child’s admission with the purchase of a full-priced adult ticket.

Hess Hay Ride: After exploring the hay maze at Butterfly Patio, board at the Fountain Circle for a hay ride like no other. Hold on tight as you pass by Birds of Prey and the “Creepy Hollows” display and go under a canopy of gorgeous fall foliage accompanied by Halloween music and a narrated storyline. (11am-4:30pm)

Haunted Safari: Dress up as Jane Goodall and head off on your safari adventure through a rainforest swamp, bat cave, and belly of a snake.  Enjoy this year’s special feature, the Augmented Reality 3-D experience. (11am-4pm)
Bronx Elephants by http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/6329531
Animal-themed Magic Shows: Bring your little magicians and white rabbits and say abra-ca-dabra as you enjoy the shows.  (12pm, 2pm, and 4pm)

Costume Parade: Show off your best costume as you march from Dancing Crane Plaza to the Grizzly Goodies Picnic Area to the tunes of Gigi and the Lend Me a Hand Band at 12:45pm or 2:45pm. On October 24th, join two cast members from Broadway’s The Addams Family in a special costume parade at 11:30am.

Extinct Animal Graveyard: Feel the spooks as you visit Mouse House lawn and learn about the endangered and extinct animals in the display.

Pumpkin Carving Demonstrations: Learn from a pro and see how Halloween art is made using 150 pound pumpkins! (October 23 and 30; 12pm-3pm)

Puppet Shows with Flexitoon Puppeteers: Join Award-winning puppeteers Craig Marin and Olga Felgemacher as they put on a custom puppet show about the Bronx Zoo animals. (1:30pm and 3:30pm at Asia Plaza Theater)

Bronx River Parkway and Boston Road, Bronx, NY 10460; 718-220-5100; http://www.bronxzoo.com/plan-your-trip/events-calendar/boo-at-the-zoo.aspx

c-zoo.aspx

Bookmark and Share

3 Responses to “Where to Celebrate Halloween in New York City”

  1. [...] Halloween in the year 2000 right in the middle of NYC was the best I have ever had. I have yet to top it and [...]

  2. [...] If you don’t already have a frightful agenda, get ideas from our columnist Meryl Pearlstein in her post about Where to Celebrate Halloween in New York City! [...]

  3. Augustine Hample says:

    Brilliant holiday article! About to add it to my RSS Reader! Thanks!

Planning a trip to NYC?