That was 1969. They started off in Washington, D.C., before it went on Broadway. Then in '72, I think, they opened up in New York. That was quite an opening. Carol Channing was there. She sat next to me in the front row. Carol Channing was the first one to do Hello Dolly. Then Louis Armstrong made a hit record out of it. But I sat next to Carol Channing. There were certain standing ovations throughout - the most that's ever been done in the history of Broadway. Walter Winchell was covering it. He was sitting in the front row about five seats away from me. After the show was over, he came to me and said, "I don't want to go backstage, because there's too much going on, but tell Pearl Bailey that that opening is the biggest opening I've ever witnessed in my whole life. " He said, "Up until that point" - what's the guy's name? The old timer. He used to do a minstrel deal. Al Jolson . . .?