Nick (luckystrike721) posted: " Vitals Peter Sellers as Jacques Clouseau, bumbling Sûreté investigator Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Winter 1963 Film: The Pink Panther Release Date: December 18, 1963 Director: Blake Edwards Wardrobe Supervisor: Annalisa Nasalli-Rocca Background" BAMF StyleRead on blog or reader
Peter Sellers with Claudia Cardinale in The Pink Panther (1963)
Vitals
Peter Sellers as Jacques Clouseau, bumbling Sûreté investigator
Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, Winter 1963
Film: The Pink Panther Release Date: December 18, 1963 Director: Blake Edwards Wardrobe Supervisor: Annalisa Nasalli-Rocca
Background
Four months after it premiered in Italy on December 18, 1963 (the same day that Brad Pitt was born, for what it's worth), The Pink Panther was released in the United States sixty years ago this March, introducing audiences to the inept Inspector Clouseau portrayed by Peter Sellers.
Though future installments would focus more intentionally on Sellers' pratfall-laden performance as Clouseau, The Pink Panther was initially more of a stylish, star-studded caper, set in the favorite winter destination for Camelot-era jet-setters: Cortina d'Ampezzo in the Italian Alps.
Clouseau is in the midst of his investigation into a prolific jewel thief known only as "the Phantom" when joining his wife Simone (Capucine) in Cortina, where we learn Simone had been planning to meet her lover, the dashing Sir Charles Lytton (David Niven)—who happens to be the mysterious Phantom that Clouseau had been chasing. Adding to the complication is the unexpected arrival of Sir Charles' mischievous nephew and protege George (Robert Wagner) and the target of Charles and Simone's next heist: the glamorous Princess Dala (Claudia Cardinale) and her princess gem called "The Pink Panther".
Of course, Clouseau never suspects any of the intrigue happening right under his nose as he joins the buttoned-up insurance investigator Tucker (Colin Gordon) and the elegant après-ski set in the hotel lounge during a random but Fran-tastic performance of Henry Mancini's samba "It Had Better Be Tonight (Meglio stasera)".
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