Tickling the ivories in this tough town is rumored to be a dangerous endeavor. What is the towns name and which author famously reintroduced this comical public notice. This town is somewhere in the western united states. Thanks!!!!
might have been Down There by David Goodis, filmed as Shoot the Pianist and I think later given the same title itself; but I don't know where it was set.
Try posting this in Quizzes & Puzzles, where people know this sort of thing
toots, the original sign was - perhaps just a myth - in an old western town and said 'Please don't shoot the piano player, he's doing his best'. So Goodis may be the author they have in mind.
If this helps, 1n 1882 Oscar Wilde on a tour visited Leadville Colorado to view a sign in a tavern that read "please don't shoot the piano player, he's doing the best he can" To which Wilde wrote a short paper reflecting on the consequences of bad art.
Of course Elton John's album, forgot the songwriter for that track, Wilde sounds more appropriate though.
I knew the city but the author is stumping me. there are so alot of options. I'm also coming up with quentin tarantino. I think I'm sticking with Wilde. still going to do some more research.
I think it's the original sign that is comical, not the writer. Wilde saw the original so he didn't really 'reintroduce' it. Goodis wrote his book (non-comic) long afterwards, so that might count as reintroduction, except that he didn't use the name 'Shoot the piano player' originally. The name was revived for the film by Truffaut - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0054389/
- and I think the book's name was then changed.
I have created a forum specifically for the Marlboro Outwit the West challenge. Please go there. All of the questions have been created as topics. Feel free to put in what your ideas are even if you don't know the answer. Me personally, I wouldn't just take someone's word for it. I'd take their idea and then research it to make certain it is correct.