NEWPORT BEACH – A cash mob may have saved Toy Boat Toy Boat Toy Boat, which was scheduled to close this week but instead remains open with brisk business, its owner said.

“We thought we would be packing up right now,” Lori Curtin said in an interview with Corona del Mar Today, squeezed between customers and gift wraps. “This has been such a blessing. I don’t even know what to say.”

Lori Curtin and her husband, Mike Curtin, announced last week that financial troubles had forced them to close three of the four Toy Boat branches, and that the Corona del Mar location at 3331 E. Coast Highway might close at the end of business on July 31.

As word spread of the couple’s plight, longtime customers of the iconic toy store began stopping by to shop and show support. One fan called radio host Bill Handel of KFI AM 640, who sponsored a cash mob Tuesday that brought hundreds of customers from as far away as Long Beach and other cities to shop and infuse the business with much-needed cash.

More than 600 toys were sold in just a few hours, Lori Curtin said, and other supporters made cash donations.

The next day, she and her husband met with their landlord and worked out an arrangement. They gave him a large portion of money owed for back rent and promised to pay back the remainder over time. The rest of their cash mob money will go to pay taxes, vendors and to replenish inventory.

Curtin declined to say how much the cash mob raised.

The couple hope to hang on until Christmastime, the biggest season for a toy business.

“That’s our goal,” Lori Curtin said. “We’re doing better. This has been huge.”