Santa Maria resident and film industry veteran Tony Piazza has done Anything Short of Murder. Thatās the title of his new detective novel, recently published by Dog Ear Press.
Inspired by pulp novels and film noir classics, the story follows a former LAPD cop as he investigates a murder against the backdrop of the Golden Age of Hollywood, āwhen movies began to talk and studio heads were kings.ā
The story that would eventually become Anything Short of Murder first came to light last May, on the website of cable network Turner Classic Movies (TCM). It was serialized in a blog in the fan community section known as the āClassic Film Union.ā
āI wanted to capture some the nostalgia and glamour of Hollywood,ā Piazza said. āI thought, āThis will play great with readers on Turner.ā They were into noir crime dramas from the 1930s and ā40s. I came up with a Raymond Chandler-type thriller, which I called Reel Murder. It has a lot to do with how movie studios work. I brought in [historical] characters and spots from 1930s Hollywood. [The blog] was voted one of top favorites of that time on the website. When I started to take the story seriously, people were writing in, saying āWhy donāt you turn this into a novel?āā
That expansion nearly doubled the length of the story, from 34,555 words to 62,600. Piazza commented that the transition wasnāt as difficult as he thought it would be.
āI had to abbreviate [the story] in the blog,ā he explained. āAll I had to do was expand it in the novelāthrow in twists, add in more action, different locations.ā
He also changed the ending to preserve the mystery element for those whoād already read the blog version. The transition to novel form took place between July and August of last year, and now the book is on the printed page, just nine months after it was born online.
āOnce I get started,ā the author explained, āI donāt have any distractions. … Thereās no place like the Central Coast. I donāt think Iād be able to write in the city. … What brought us to Santa Maria was my in-laws. They were here and loved the area. I donāt regret making the move.ā
This isnāt the first novel attempt for Piazza, who holds a degree in biology from San Francisco State University and works as assistant to the quality assurance manager at food safety laboratory Primus Labs in Santa Maria. When the author was 9, he attempted to hammer one out on a portable typewriter.
āI ended up with nothing but a big pile of crumpled up paper,ā he said.
In a sense, heād been preparing for his successful novel for years without even knowing it. He and the movie business go a long way backāheās been āon and off movie setsā since he was 4.
Piazza was born and raised in the Bay Area. His father worked for the police department as a liaison for Hollywood movie studios.

āHaving a father that was also police officer,ā Piazza said, āI was also raised around a lot of law enforcement and understood a lot about guns and procedure. Our neighbor was on the homicide bureau.ā
The author worked in the film industry 10 years in the 1970s as an actor, extra, and stand-in. He worked on The Towering Inferno and Days of Wine and Roses, and such TV shows as The Untouchables, Invaders, Barnaby Jones, and The Streets of San Francisco.
āI worked all five years on it, as an auxiliary stand-in,ā he said of Streets. āI was Michael Douglasā stand in, Richard Hatchās stand-in. I had some onscreen performances as a police officer. And I photo-doubled Larry Hagman.ā
More recently, he was an extra in Sideways, a 2004 film set in Central Coast wine country.
Working with other industry professionals, from hairstylists to stunt people, informed his creative writing. He used āa lot of little traitsā from the people he remembers as inspiration for his characters.
The novel takes readers to some iconic Los Angeles locationsāincluding the Santa Monica Pier and the Hollywood Bowlāas well as to legendary landmarks that no longer exist, like the Cocoanut Grove nightclub (the remains of which are now part of a school auditorium) and the Brown Derby restaurant. (There was actually a chain of Brown Derbys, a fact brought up in the novel.)
Piazzaās research included watching old footage of the sights and looking at pictures of menus. He noted that, in particular, he wanted to make the scene in the Brown Derby as realistic as possible.
His wife Susan, who grew up in L.A., had been to some of the bygone spots, including the Derby, and also helped his investigation into authenticity.
āA lot of people who read the blog say I got the details right,ā he said.
Piazza also wanted to be true to the genre that inspired him.
āI wanted it to be like what audiences would have read back in the ā40s,ā he said. āI didnāt emphasize profanity and violence.ā
When asked if heād ever imagined his novel being turned into a movie, he commented that Hollywood is often reluctant to work on a period piece unless itās guaranteed to be a big hit, because of the cost involved.
āIf somebody wants to make one,ā he added, āI wouldnāt say no.ā
He thinks his second book, currently in the works, might be more cinematically adaptable.
Keeping up his whirlwind pace, the author has currently written up to chapter 17 of a planned 24.
āIt would make a great movie,ā he said of his new project, ābecause itās more of an action adventure. Itās set on Pearl Harbor in Hawaii. Itās almost like an Indiana Jones-type thing. I donāt know where I come up with these things, but I do.ā
Arts Editor Shelly Cone hates keeping a whirlwind pace. Contact her slowly at scone@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Feb 3-10, 2011.


