The Pink Panther/Trivia

The films

 * Actor Allusion:
 * In Strikes Again, Dreyfus is fond of playing the pipe organ a la The Phantom of the Opera. Herbert Lom, who played Dreyfus, played the titular Phantom in a 1962 film adaption.
 * In the 2006 remake, Clive Owen plays 006. Clouseau asks him if he wasn't good enough to be 007. Clive Owen was at one point considered for the role of James Bond.
 * Author Existence Failure: Peter Sellers died during planning of the unmade "Romance of the Pink Panther". As a result, the project was scrapped, though Blake Edwards would make "Trail" two years later.
 * Cash Cow Franchise: Even more so when you add in the animated spinoffs and their associated merchandise.
 * Development Hell: The reboot was in the works since the turn of the millennium.
 * Fake Nationality: Peter Sellers was an Englishman playing a Frenchman, but beyond this, the character of Clouseau affects several disguises in the course of the series that require him to be various other highly-caricatured nationalities.
 * Herbert Lom (Commissioner Dreyfus) and Graham Stark (several roles) are also British. Sellers and Lom already co-acted together in "The Ladykillers"
 * Italian Maria Gambrelli in "A Shot in the Dark" was played by German Elke Sommer.
 * Fake Russian: Lesley Anne-Down (British) as the Russian spy Olga in Strikes Again.
 * Funny Character Boring Actor: Peter Sellers.
 * Hey, It's That Guy!:
 * Apparently Scar/Simon Gruber has taken an interest in fencing and became an instructor in France who trained The Tornado serial thief.
 * For the original films: Doctor Strangelove, Chance the gardener, Hrundi as Inspector Clouseau.
 * Hey, It's That Voice!: George Sanders, the voice of Shere Khan, plays Ballon in Shot.
 * I Am Not Spock: Averted with Peter Sellers, David Niven, and Robert Wagner; played straight with most of the others.
 * Missing Episode: Sort of - MGM/UA doesn't own the rights to Return (currently, Universal/Focus Features does) so while all are available on DVD, there's never been a proper box set of the five "true" Sellers films. MGM is also not allowed to mention "Return" in any published material, either. They do however hold the rights to release it digitally.
 * Money, Dear Boy: Partial motivation for Sellers being willing to reprise the role of Clouseau in the 1970s (the other was getting enough clout to get Being There greenlit).
 * Old Shame: Alan Arkin, not surprisingly, considers making Inspector Clouseau a mistake. He has rarely spoken much about the film in the years since, but one time Arkin did explain why he took up the role. In the late-60s he was becoming a fairly well-known actor and thought that as a movie actor, he could do whatever role was offered to him, and he could do it easily. He admits that the failure of Inspector Clouseau knocked him off his high horse.
 * The Other Darrin: The Clouseaus besides Sellers, of course, but several other recurring characters were played by different actors from film to film (see the trope entry) in the classic series. In the rebooted series, Kevin Kline played Dreyfus in the first entry, but was replaced with John Cleese in the second.
 * Star-Making Role: Peter Sellers was already a huge star in the United Kingdom thanks to The Goon Show and a list of TV and film credits that was already in the double digits, and had made inroads in North America with The Mouse That Roared and his work with Stanley Kubrick, but Inspector Clouseau was the role that made him an international success.
 * Technology Marches On: In Strikes Again, the insane man who breaks into the television broadcast is identified through a photograph someone took off a TV screen.
 * Throw It In: Occasionally; for instance, the "synchronized watches" bit in Shot was largely improvised by Peter Sellers and Graham Stark.
 * Also Clouseau's line 'a rit of fealous jage' was supposedly a slip up (there is an outtake where Sellers and George Sanders both crack up at it) which was later re-filmed as part of the script.
 * What Could Have Been:
 * Peter Ustinov was originally cast as Clouseau, but left over a salary dispute.
 * Sophia Loren and Walter Matthau were considered for Shot but were replaced when Blake Edwards stepped in.
 * The Revenge shoot in Hong Kong was almost derailed by monsoon season; the threat of the rain keeping up had Blake Edwards having his assistants check up on Rio de Janeiro as an alternative location.
 * The aforementioned Romance of the Pink Panther -- intended as the series Grand Finale, derailed by the death of Peter Sellers, led to the Replacement Scrappy disasters.
 * With regards to the reboot, potential Clouseaus included Kevin Spacey, Chris Tucker, and Mike Myers. Myers was the most sought-after, but his asking fee was too high.
 * In the early stages, Paul Giamatti was considered for the role of Dreyfus in the reboot, and there were even plans for a Running Gag that would have had the Pink Panther animated character worked into the actual story by having him appear as Dreyfus's madness-induced hallucinations.
 * Plans to incorporate Cato into the reboot were scrapped when the filmmakers couldn't get Jackie Chan for the role.
 * The reboot originally had a stylized title sequence where the Panther was animated with CGI. It was dropped and was replaced with a traditionally animated opening with the Panther and Clouseau.

The cartoons

 * Beam Me Up, Scotty/Spell My Name with a "The": In the 1990s' animated series, he is not Pink Panther, but The Pink Panther. Emphasis on The at beginning.
 * Hey, It's That Voice!:
 * The 1993 animated version has the main character voiced by Max Headroom.
 * And Dan Castellaneta, aka Homer Simpson, as Voodoo Man and others.
 * Wallace Shawn as the Little Man.
 * The Ant and the Aardvark, who appeared in supporting cartoons and bumpers on the 1970 Pink Panther, were voiced by comedian John Byner. The voices of the Ant and Aardvark closely resembled those of Dean Martin and Jackie Mason, respectively.
 * The David Niven-ish voice of the Panther in 1965's "Pink Ice" was done by impressionist Rich Little.
 * Keep Circulating the Tapes: Only available via dodgy torrent sites in Eastern Europe, and Kamuz TV's Argentinian-Spanish copies, but no official DVD release of all 3 series exists (for this 1993 one). You could get a DVD at one point, but it was only of Series 1, the 1993 series.
 * So it's left to fan petitions, then... for the full series release.
 * The complete first season is Available on Amazon.de
 * Talking to Himself: The Ant and Aardvark, both voiced by John Byner.