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Taxi pinball machine

Collector Value Est.

$2,900–$5,100

USD · Market estimate

Near-mint / restored. Worn or stored examples sell for 30–60% less.

DemandHigh
Rarity35/100
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Williams · 1988

Taxi

The one taxi Marilyn, Gorbie, Santa, Dracula... and Operators Everywhere are Hailing!" "The one taxi Lola, Gorbie, Santa, Dracula... and Operators Everywhere are Hailing!" "Get ready for the taxi everyone's going to be lining up for!

Notable Features

Flippers (2), Pop bumpers (3), Slingshots (2), Kick-out holes (2), 3-bank drop targets (2), Standup target (1). A left-side catapult propels the ball airborne into a habitrail. A plunger lane skill shot shoots the ball into the "Spin-Out" whirlpool to score up to 100,000 points. Actual measured weight: 245 lbs (includes legs).

1988
Year
7,300
Produced
4
Players
Specifications
Manufacturer
Williams
Year Released
1988
Type
SS
Display
alphanumeric
MPU
Williams System 11B
Model #
553
Units Produced
7,300
Players
4
Credits
Design
Mark Ritchie
Art
Python Anghelo
Music
Chris Granner
Sound
Chris Granner
Software
Ed Boon
Mechanics
Craig Fitpold, Tony Kraemer, Mark Kim

Historical Notes

First Williams game to display four-player scores using only two alpha-numeric 16-character displays. The first games in production were made with a blonde 'Marilyn' taxi passenger, a likeness of Marilyn Monroe. This was changed during production to be a darker-haired 'Lola', ostensibly a likeness of no one famous. We asked Roger Sharpe about the reason for this change. He replies:Suffice it to say that we did have some limited run of machines featuring a 'blonde Marilyn' — and I don’t know if these were for international only. However, we were informed that there were rights that needed to be secured in order to use Marilyn and the decision was made to just alter the artwork so that the female character was renamed ‘Lola’ for the main production run. If memory serves, and I can’t say with certainty—there might be games that were manufactured with a brunette Lola and then a redheaded Lola. The changes needed to introduce 'Lola' include backglass art, playfield art, game software, and instruction card. According to Mark Ritchie, as explained in the book The Pinball Compendium 1982 to Present, at least 200 sample games were in the process of being shipped with 'Marilyn' before the change had to be made. He also explained the name 'Lola' was taken from a 1970s song about a transvestite, chosen to befit her muscular arms as depicted on the backglass. Marilyn's face appears twice on the playfield: directly below the center drop target bank and also as an illuminating insert further down. We have seen one instance of the Lola playfield where she was still blonde near the drop targets but was a brunette in the insert. We don't know how many playfields were made this way. Production Run Records for Taxi: Production Start Date: Aug-31-1988 Production End Date: Dec-14-1988 Production Run Quantity: 7300 First ship date: Aug-31-1988 Last ship date: Feb-13-1989

Where to Play It

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