A Shot in the Dark Notes

Although A Shot in the Dark is best known as a film in the Pink Panther series, its origins as a play have little to do with Inspector Clouseau. The first version, L’Idiote, was written by the French playwright Marcel Achard in 1960. In just a four year span, the play was given an English translation, a year-long run on Broadway, and a feature film adaptation. Though the film was never intended to be a part of the Pink Panther series, a last minute decision was made to rework the story to include Peter Sellars’ famous French detective. Since then, most have forgotten about Harry Kurnitz’s Broadway hit and only a few know of its beginnings as a classic boulevard comedy by one of France’s most prolific playwrights.
Marcel Achard was born Marcel-Auguste Ferreol in Sainte-Foy-Les Lyon in 1899. Achard loved telling the story of his birth, which required special dispensation from both the Pope and the President because his father had married his own niece. Perhaps the odd circumstances of his childhood instilled a sense of humor at an early age. Achard wrote his first “cape-and-sword” play at the age of ten, and by the age of eighteen he had moved to Paris to pursue a career in theater. One of his first jobs was as a prompter for the Theatre du Vieux-Colombier, giving actors their cues from under the footlights. The young Achard was quickly fired, however, as he found himself too distracted by the actresses’ legs.
His next job was as a journalist for L’Oeuvre, and it was during this time that he began writing for the stage. Although his first few plays had little success, his fourth play Jean de la Lune brought him major success, both in France and internationally. From 1923 to 1959, Achard wrote more than twenty-five plays, mostly boulevard comedies: farces of infidelity, mistaken identity and misguided amours. Early critics compared Achard to the likes of Alfred de Musset, but after World War II boulevard comedies were criticized for their lack of redeeming social values. Still, plays like Achards filled playhouses, and Achard went on to become one of the most prolific playwrights of his time. He was elected to the prestigious Academie Francaise in 1959.
Four of Achard’s plays had Broadway runs. Domino, adapted by Grace George (1932), and Irwin Shaw’s version of Patate (1958) each ran for only seven performances. I Know My Love, S.N. Behrman’s translation of Aupres de me blonde, had a much better run with 247 performances in 1949. A Shot in the Dark had the longest run of Achard adaptations with 389 performances. At the time of its Broadway premiere, Achard was doing quite well in France, with three plays running simultaneously on Parisian stages.
Harry Kurnitz adapted L’Idiote into its English incarnation in 1961. Kurnitz was a former reporter who came to Hollywood in 1938 to adapt his own story, Fast Company, into a film. It would be the start of a very successful career in screenwriting. From 1940 to 1957, Kurnitz helped adapt, develop or create over twenty-four film scripts including the Errol Flynn classic Adventures of Don Juan, Danny Kaye’s The Inspector General, and the Billy Wilder adaptation of Agatha Christie’s play Witness for the Prosecution. Kurnitz, a card-carrying member of the Communist party, was blacklisted from Hollywood in 1946. He moved to Europe and continued to write from abroad, but he did not return to the United States for ten years. When he finally did return, he went back to his hometown—New York City—and began writing plays. His first play, The Reclining Figure ran for over 100 performances in 1955. His next hit, Once More, With Feeling (1958) enjoyed an impressive run on Broadway and was adapted into a film starring Yul Brynner in 1960. In 1963 he teamed up with Noel Coward to write the musical The Girl Who Came to Supper, an adaptation of Terrence Rattigan’s play The Sleeping Prince. Kurnitz and Coward were both nominated for Tony Awards for Best Author (Musical) in 1964.
A Shot in the Dark was Kurnitz’s longest running play on Broadway, opening in October 18th 1961 and closing on September 22nd, 1962. The play received excellent reviews, in particular for lead actress Julie Harris in the role of Josefa Lantenay. Harris was already a Broadway star, with two Tony awards under her belt for I Am a Camera in 1952 and The Lark in 1956. William Shatner originated the role of the magistrate Paul Sevigne and was praised as the play’s “straight man.” Walter Matthau also received critical acclaim for his performance as the snobby aristocrat Benjamin Beaurevers. Donald Cook had originally been cast in the role, but he died of a heart attack shortly after the auditions in New Haven. In his book On Directing, director Harold Clurman recalls that Matthau’s casting caused a lot of “head-shaking. He was certainly not ‘the type.’” To help with Matthau’s transformation, Clurman suggested that Matthau listen to a song he found to be “super-elegant” and walk around his apartment to it before rehearsal. His gait changed so much that the producers asked Clurman to cut it, but he refused. It must have worked because Matthau received the show’s only Tony award, for Best Supporting or Featured Actor.
A Shot in the Dark was adapted for film just a few years later by William Peter Blatty and Blake Edwards. Blatty is best known today for his novel and screenplay The Exorcist, although he got his start in comedic writing. He teamed up with Blake Edwards for the first time to write A Shot in the Dark, and the two went on to create several other films together, including What Did You Do in the War, Daddy? (1966), Gunn (1967) and Darling Lilly (1970).
A Shot in the Dark was originally intended to be a straightforward adaptation of Kurnitz’s play with Peter Sellars and Walter Matthau in the lead roles. Sellars was unhappy with the film and threatened to leave the project. In order to keep Sellars happy, United Artists brought in Sellars’ friend Blake Edwards, who felt that the script might work better using the characters from Edwards and Sellars last project, The Pink Panther, which had not yet finished filming. The two films were completed so close to each other that A Shot in the Dark was released just four months after The Pink Panther in 1964.
The initial response to the film was lukewarm. Critics complained about the lack of substance in the story and found the physical humor to be too broad. Much like Achard’s audience in France, movie-goers ignored the critics and made the film a great success. Today, many critics now consider A Shot in the Dark to be not only the best of the Pink Panther series, but also one of the funniest films of all time.