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9[[quoteright:284:[[Webcomic/ItSucksToBeWeegie https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/secondary_character_title_7.jpg]]]]
10[[caption-width-right:284:[[Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda She]] isn't even in some of them.]]
11
12-> ''"Michael Corleone is ''Film/TheGodfather'''s protagonist. The Don gets shot about 40 minutes into the film's three-hour running time, and while he survives and has a few scenes thereafter, virtually everything memorable about [[Creator/MarlonBrando Brando’s]] performance occurs within the first couple of reels."''
13-->-- '''Mike D'Angelo''', [[https://thedissolve.com/features/performance-review/301-in-1972-the-oscar-went-to-the-right-actor-in-the-w/ "In 1972, the Oscar Went to the Right Actor in the Wrong Category"]]
14
15It's common for a series to be [[CharacterTitle named after one or more of its main characters]]. Either [[ProtagonistTitle the series title and the star's name are one and the same]] (as in ''Literature/JaneEyre'' and ''Franchise/IndianaJones'') or [[NameAndName the names of more than one protagonist will appear in the title]] (as in ''Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet'' and ''WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry''). Occasionally, though, the title comes from the name of a character who is ''not'' the main protagonist, which may cause some [[ProtagonistTitleFallacy confusion about who's who]]. Usually, this character is pivotal to the plot or sets the story in motion. It still can cause confusion, especially when the actor playing the protagonist is billed directly above the title.
16
17This trope sometimes leads to IAmNotShazam, when people think the title is the protagonist's name. On the other hand, when the eponymous secondary character is mistaken for the protagonist, someone has committed the ProtagonistTitleFallacy. Often takes the form of POVBoyPosterGirl, especially in Japanese media.
18
19SubTrope of CharacterTitle. Compare VillainBasedFranchise, AntagonistTitle, SupportingProtagonist, {{Deuteragonist}}. May overlap with TrivialTitle if the secondary character is especially unimportant to the story, or with ArtifactTitle if the character [[OutOfFocus used to be]] the protagonist.
20
21----
22!!Examples:
23
24[[foldercontrol]]
25
26[[folder:Animation]]
27* ''Animation/GuardianFairyMichel'' largely focuses on Kim White, an AcePilot who meets the titular Michel and ends up traveling with him when her old enemies kidnap the rest of the fairies. Although Michel can do a FusionDance to merge with any rescued fairies and gain their powers, it's Kim who does the final blow to most monsters they fight.
28[[/folder]]
29
30[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
31* ''Anime/AfterWarGundamX'': While the titular mecha was initially piloted by protagonist Garrod Ran, he gets a MidSeasonUpgrade in the form of the Double X Gundam and the titular mech was then piloted by BigGood Jamil Neate.
32* ''Anime/AttackerYou'': This trope applies to the title in foreign adaptations, specifically European, where NameAndName titles were very common. In Italy, the anime is known as ''Mila and Shiro'', the [[DubNameChange "Italian" names]] of ''You and Sho''. Even though he is You's LoveInterest, Sho is a minor character ''at best'' and his name certainly doesn't deserve to be in the title along with the protagonist.
33* ''Manga/CaptainTsubasa''. Even though the series is only Tsubasa-centric, in many European adaptations the anime is known with a NameAndName title that makes it look like that Tsubasa and Genzo Wakabayashi are both equally important protagonists (evidenced also by the theme songs). While still a major character, Wakabayashi is often kept OutOfFocus (or even PutOnABus) due to injuries or other reasons.
34* Richard of ''Literature/TheCaseFilesOfJewelerRichard'' is actually the deutragonist. Seigi Nakata, his employee, is the protagonist.
35* ''Literature/ACertainMagicalIndex'': The title character is only the second most important character in the series; the main character is Touma. Though the first story arc revolved around her, Index rarely even makes an appearance in a lot of later story arcs.
36* ''Manga/ChibisanDate'': Despite the title, Seiji is the real main character; Chibisan is more of a mascot than anything.
37* ''Franchise/DragonBall'' is named after the titular wish granting orbs of Shenron who putting it frankly is nowhere near top billing in the cast with the main protagonist of course being Goku (though granted “''Kung Fu Aliens Screaming and Shooting Beams at Each Other''” isn’t nearly as punchy). Also somewhat of an ArtefactTitle as the cast (barring Bulma) after early series rarely seek out of the Dragon Balls to summon Shenron unless there are innocent lives killed by the ArcVillain to be resurrected and in a lot of the movies the Dragon Balls and Shenron don’t even appear.
38* ''Manga/DropkickOnMyDevil'' (or also known as ''Jashin-chan Dropkick''): Despite what the title or marketing suggests to the audience, the main character is Yurine Hanazono, the girl who summoned Jashin-chan and is responsible for kicking off the plot of the series in the first place. While Jashin may be the face of the series, Yurine is overall the central protagonist.
39* ''Manga/DoctorSlump'' was originally supposed to be the story of the wacky inventor Senbei Norimaki (AKA. The eponymous Dr. Slump), however, RobotGirl Arale ended up taking center stage, to the point that the AnimatedAdaptation was actually called "''Dr. Slump: Arale-chan''".
40* ''Manga/{{Doraemon}}'': Nobita is the main protagonist in virtually most stories/episodes of the series. Actually, most of the movies have CharacterNameAndTheNounPhrase titles like "Nobita and..." or "Nobita's..."
41* ''Manga/{{Dororo}}'': Hyakkimaru is really the main protagonist. The original anime is titled ''Dororo to Hyakkimaru''.
42* ''Manga/Fabricant100'': Fabricant No 100 is the {{Deuteragonist}} of the story and [[KidHero Ashibi Yao]]'s bodyguard, despite also being his enemy.
43* ''Manga/{{Fuuka}}'' offers an ambiguous example; technically, the main character is neither Fuuka Akitsuki nor Fuuka Aoi. Even more so after Akitsuki dies.
44* ''Literature/HaruhiSuzumiya'': At first glance, it may look like Haruhi is the main character (she is after all the poster girl) but [[POVBoyPosterGirl she's]] [[DecoyProtagonist not]]. Kyon serves as the narrator and POV character for the entire series, becoming more and more clearly TheHero as events progress. He is only the SupportingProtagonist in the sense that many of the events that occur are a result of Haruhi's actions or emotional state.
45* The protagonist of ''Manga/{{Helck}}'' is Red Vamirio of the Demon Empire, but most of the story revolves around the human hero Helck, who she travels together with.
46* Despite being the titular ''Manga/HighScoreGirl'' who drives much of the plot, legendary [[GamerChick arcade gamer]] [[CuteBruiser Akira]] [[ChildProdigy Oono]] isn't the main character of the series. That honor goes to [[LoserProtagonist Haruo Yaguchi]], who befriends her.
47* The main protagonist and POV character of ''Manga/{{Inuyasha}}'' is actually Kagome, though the titular Inuyasha gets almost as much screen time and serves as the deuteragonist.
48* ''Anime/LuOverTheWall'': The titular character is the second most important character in the film. The main character and the one whose character development drives much of it is Kai.
49* ''Manga/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaVivid'' and ''Manga/MagicalRecordLyricalNanohaForce'', the two fourth season manga of the ''Franchise/LyricalNanoha'' franchise, still keeps Nanoha's name in the title even though her main character status has been taken by [[SpinOffspring Vivio]] and Thoma respectively. This is especially noticeable in ''[=ViVid=]'', where multiple volumes could pass with Nanoha barely appearing on page.
50* ''Literature/MoribitoGuardianOfTheSpirit'': The title "Guardian of the Spirit" actually refers to the young [[ShelteredAristocrat Prince Chagum]], not the main protagonist [[ActionGirl Balsa.]] This is easy to mistake, as Balsa is [[MamaBear Chagum's bodyguard]], making her the Guardian of the Guardian of the Spirit.
51* ''Anime/MyHime'': After being the main character, Mai Tokiha barely appears in the {{Elseworld}} spin-off ''Anime/MyOtome'', relegated to a supporting role near the end. Also an example of ArtifactTitle.
52* ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'': Ash, first and foremost, is the main character of the series rather than the titular creatures, with Pikachu as his partner. In fact, the {{Mons}} in general take a backseat to the humans. This is somewhat true of the game series as well, but to a lesser extent due to how much the gameplay itself revolves around the titular {{Mons}}.
53* ''Anime/PuellaMagiMadokaMagicaTheMovieRebellion'' has the titular character fall to a supporting role with the story being told from Homura's perspective.
54* ''Manga/Reborn2004'' has Reborn, the hitman who is the tutor to the main character Tsunayoshi Sawada. Reborn does nothing except making Tsuna stronger and stronger, so the latter can beat the crap out of the enemies.
55* ''Anime/SaberMarionetteJ'': Otaru Mamiya is the main protagonist whom the eponymous trio of marionettes follow.
56* ''Manga/{{Sankarea}}'': The plot mainly follows Chihiro Furuya, although Rea Sanka is pretty much the central character to the plot.
57* ''Manga/SoulEater'' is an extra strange case. It has been confirmed by the author not to be named after Soul "Eater" Evans, who is a main character, but the antagonist Asura's desire to devour souls. Asura has very little screen time, though his presence behind the scenes drives every arc's plot.
58* Tenchi is the main character of ''Anime/TenchiMuyoRyoOhki'' but Ryo-Ohki is fairly low down in his harem compared to a lot of the other characters.
59* ''Manga/TensaiBakabon'' is initially a gag manga about a little boy named Bakabon and his adventures with his pals, focusing so strongly on his point of view that his parents don't even get names, referred to only as "Papa" and "Mama." Over time, however, Bakabon's troublemaking father becomes the BreakoutCharacter, to the point that the series soon revolves around him and his various schemes. Bakabon himself is demoted to his occasional sidekick. Despite this, the dad is still never given a name, and is called "Bakabon's Father" on merchandise.
60* ''Literature/VioletEvergarden'': In the first 4 chapters, Violet's clients are the main characters of each short story. Violet didn't become the protagonist until Chapter 5.
61[[/folder]]
62
63[[folder:Comic Books]]
64* ''ComicBook/BarbeRouge'': The actual protagonist of the series is Eric, Barbe-Rouge's adopted son. Barbe-Rouge himself is absent from half the stories.
65* ''ComicBook/{{Gear}}''. The title character doesn't show up until the second-to-last issue. The word "gear" isn't even mentioned by name until then. The main characters are actually Waffle, Gordon, and Mr. Black.
66* In the ''ComicBook/LandsOfArran'' series ''Nains'', ''Derdhr of the Talion'' is actually a direct sequel to ''Ordo of the Talion'' focusing more on the latter than on the title character.
67* ''ComicBook/{{Sha}}'': The main character is a witch named Lara; Sha is the protector deity of witches who makes Lara remember her past life.
68* Most comic book series starring Creator/DCComics' Captain Marvel are named ''ComicBook/{{Shazam}}'', after Captain Marvel's wizard mentor, or, more specifically, the conflated word Billy Batson says to transform. This is actually due to an agreement with Creator/MarvelComics over the use of the name "Captain Marvel" -- it can't be used in the title of a DC book. At least it ''was'' the case, since in 2011, Captain Marvel was officially renamed Shazam.
69* ''ComicBook/{{Superman}}'':
70** The main character of ''ComicBook/{{Convergence}}: Adventures of Superman'' is the Pre-Crisis ComicBook/{{Supergirl}}. Superman himself is the {{Deuteragonist}}.
71** ''ComicBook/TheGirlWithTheXRayMind'': The eponymous girl is Lena Thorul, whereas the main character is her friend Supergirl, who is investigating Lena's mysterious past.
72* ''Franchise/{{Tintin}}'': The story ''[[Recap/TintinKingOttokarsSceptre King Ottokar's Sceptre]]'' is a tertiary character title where one might expect a secondary: the king in the story is named Muskar. (The eponymous sceptre was named for his ancestor Ottokar.)
73* ''ComicBook/XMenNoir'', an {{Elseworld}} miniseries set in a version of 1930s New York without any superpowered heroes, is an example of this, oddly enough. Its protagonist is actually [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angel_(Thomas_Halloway) Thomas "The Angel" Halloway]], (Completely unrelated to Warren Worthington III of the original ''ComicBook/XMen'', who's a PosthumousCharacter in this story) a mostly forgotten Timely Comics character who spends the story investigating the murder that kicks off the plot. "The X-Men" are a fugitive gang of teenage criminals who are suspected of said murder and end up helping Halloway take down the real criminals by the end.
74[[/folder]]
75
76[[folder:Comic Strips]]
77* ''Barney Google'', after some years, focused on Barney's hillbilly cousin. Eventually, the series was renamed after the latter, ''ComicStrip/SnuffySmith''.
78* ''ComicStrip/Blondie1930'': Blondie is the wife of the main character, Dagwood, though she was the lead during the strip's start.
79* ''ComicStrip/FunkyWinkerbean'' really did once star the title character, but as time went on, he was DemotedToExtra.
80* ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'': In some countries, the strip is known as ''Snoopy'', because "Peanuts" sounds silly when translated and Snoopy is probably the most marketable character for merchandising, even though Charlie Brown is clearly the protagonist.
81* ''Polly and Her Pals'': Initially, Polly ''was'' the main character, until Cliff Sterrett (the artist) decided that her father, Paw Perkins, had more comedic potential and made ''him'' the star of the strip.
82[[/folder]]
83
84[[folder:Fairy Tales]]
85* "Literature/TheFeatherOfFinistTheFalcon": Finist is the LoveInterest.
86* "Literature/TheFrostTheSunAndTheWind": The protagonist is an unnamed traveler who bumps into the titular entities.
87* "Literature/TheGratefulBeasts" are the hero's allies and helpers after he cured them.
88* ''Literature/IronHans'' tricks the prince (the main character) into freeing him, abducts him to protect him from punishment, and aids him thereafter.
89* ''Literature/TheKingWhoWouldBeStrongerThanFate'': The hero is the boy he tries to murder to avoid his daughter's fate.
90* In "Literature/{{Morozko}}", the titular Winter spirit takes pity on and helps the heroine when she is abandoned in the woods.
91* "Literature/MotherHolle" hires the protagonist as a housemaid when she wanders into her realm.
92* In Creator/AsbjornsenAndMoe's "Literature/TheOldDameAndHerHen", neither the old woman nor the hen play any kind of important role.
93* ''Literature/ThePrincessOnTheGlassHill'' is the LoveInterest.
94* "Literature/{{Reygoch}}": Albeit the story is named after the titular giant, Curlylocks is the point-of-view character who drives the plot forward.
95* ''Literature/{{Schippeitaro}}'' is the dog the hero needs to help him.
96* ''Literature/TheSevenRavens'' are the heroine's brothers.
97* Literature/SnowWhiteFireRed is the LoveInterest.
98* "Literature/TheThreeAunts" help the heroine.
99* "Literature/TheThreeLittleMenInTheWood": The titular characters' barely show up in two scenes, and their only role is to reward and punish the actual protagonist and her stepsister, respectively.
100* "Literature/TheTwelveDancingPrincesses" are dancing the night away, and the hero has to try to find out why.
101* "Literature/TheWhiteDove" is the LoveInterest.
102* "Literature/TheKingOfTheGoldenRiver": The eponymous King rewards the main character's kidness and punishes his abusive brothers' evil.
103* "Literature/TheDevilWithTheThreeGoldenHairs": The Devil is not the BigBad, but an obstacle for the main character.
104* In Creator/FranzXaverVonSchonwerth's "Literature/TheTurnipPrincess", the eponymous princess is the bride whom the main character is seeking.
105[[/folder]]
106
107[[folder:Fan Works]]
108* While the title of ''Fanfic/ChristianWestonChandlerInSurvivorKujiraJima'' implies Chris to be a [[SpotlightStealingSquad spotlight stealer]], everyone gets a fair amount of screen time and character development, some more than Chris himself.
109* In ''Fanfic/ChrysalisVisitsTheHague'', Queen Chrysalis may be the character that kicked the plot off to begin with, but her lawyer Estermann is the actual protagonist.
110* ''Fanfic/{{Jessica}}'' is named after Cameron's Pikachu from ''Pokémon Yellow'', who reappears inexplicably in a different game years later.
111* ''Fanfic/VowOfNudity'': Played with in the prequel story, regarding the series name. It's the only story where the protagonist herself is fully clothed and doesn't fit the series title "Vow of Nudity," but instead, one of her party members is a [[MechanicalLifeforms warforged]].
112[[/folder]]
113
114[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
115* ''Anime/AdolescenceOfUtena'': Whether it's an AlternateContinuity of ''Anime/RevolutionaryGirlUtena'' (in which the titular Utena Tenjou is the undisputed protagonist) or a StealthSequel is [[EpilepticTrees up in the air]], but the film is Anthy Himemiya's story overall.
116* ''Manga/{{Akira}}'' spends the entirety of the film version in a glass jar. He's somewhat more active in the manga version, but while plot-relevant (being a young psychic PersonOfMassDestruction who destroyed Tokyo), he isn't much more than tertiary as a character.
117* ''WesternAnimation/BatmanAssaultOnArkham'' focuses on the Suicide Squad more than Batman.
118* ''Anime/BleachMemoriesOfNobody'' refers to Senna, a girl who has [[MultipleChoicePast multiple memories]] [[spoiler:that weren't really hers to begin with due to being an amalgam of different souls]].
119* ''WesternAnimation/TheBossBaby'': The Boss Baby is the title character, but his older brother, the UnreliableNarrator Tim, is really the protagonist.
120* ''WesternAnimation/{{Coco}}'': The protagonist is Miguel, Coco is his great-grandma.
121* ''WesternAnimation/CorpseBride'': The real hero is Victor. Emily, the titular "Corpse Bride", is the RomanticFalseLead.
122* ''WesternAnimation/FindingNemo'': The main character is Marlin, Nemo's father, with Dory as the {{Deuteragonist}}. The titular Nemo is actually the tritagonist.
123* ''WesternAnimation/{{Gisaku}}'': The main character is actually Yohei. Gisaku is little more than a pet for most of the film.
124* ''WesternAnimation/AGoofyMovie'': The story of the film focuses more on Goofy's son Max than it does on Goofy. It shows Max's premonition of taking after his father, trying to become popular, attempting to get the girl of his dreams to notice him, and struggling to cover up his lie to both Roxanne and Goofy. The one time we actually get to see a scene that focuses on Goofy's perspective alone is when [[spoiler:he discovers that Max changed his directions on the map]].
125* ''Franchise/HowToTrainYourDragon'' naturally refers to the dragons and Toothless in particular, but the actual story is about Hiccup, his father Stoick as well as Astrid and the other Viking teens. The dragons are important, but in both the movies and animated shows they still play second fiddle to the human cast who treat them like dear pets and personal fighter jets.
126* ''WesternAnimation/TheIronGiant'' is the {{Deuteragonist}}.
127* ''WesternAnimation/TheLorax2012'' is named for the titular NatureSpirit, but he's merely a supporting character in the Once-ler's story and a long-gone non-factor in Ted's.
128* ''WesternAnimation/LeroyAndStitch'': The more marketable [[Franchise/LiloAndStitch Stitch]] has more of a supporting role in this film than a leading role, and fellow title character Leroy is only a secondary antagonist who gets cloned in short order. The film is really about Lilo having to come with terms that she needs to say goodbye to Stitch, Jumba and Pleakley after they persue their apparent dream jobs (or, in Jumba's case, return to his old job), only to reunite with them when main BigBad Hämsterviel is broken out of prison by Gantu and forces Jumba to create Leroy. She also gets the help of Experiment 625, who she finally names "Reuben", after he was abandoned by Gantu.
129* ''WesternAnimation/MeetTheRobinsons'': The Robinsons are not the main characters of the film. But they do welcome the actual protagonist, Lewis, into their family. [[spoiler:This is technically a subversion since a future version of Lewis is the Robinson patriarch.]]
130* ''WesternAnimation/MickeysChristmasCarol'' Ebenezer Scrooge, the main character, is represented by (obviously) Scrooge [=McDuck=]. Meanwhile, Mickey himself takes the role of Bob Cratchit, still an important role but not the lead.
131* ''Anime/MiraiOfTheFuture'': The titular character is the {{deuteragonist}}, since the focus is on Kun.
132* ''Anime/MyNeighborTotoro'': The titular character refers to the creature the main characters, Satsuki and Mei, meet after moving to their new home.
133* ''WesternAnimation/OnceUponAForest'': The [[CompletelyDifferentTitle European French]] title is ''Le Voyage d'Edgar dans la forêt magique'' (''Edgar's Voyage in the Magical Forest''). Why it focuses on Edgar in particular is anyone's guess (most likely due to the most memorable part, the climax in which the poor eponymous mole gets caught in a trap, but still) since he's not even TheLeader of the main trio (Abigail is). And the forest is not magical.
134* ''Film/ThePagemaster'': The Pagemaster is the all-powerful wizard who sends Richard on a journey to overcome his fears. While he sets the plot in motion, he only appears in two brief scenes.
135* ''Anime/Pokemon4Ever'', known as ''Celebi: Voice of the Forrest'', focuses on Sammy with Ash being TheHero. Both wanting to protect Celebi from a maniacal Team Rocket member.
136* ''Anime/PokemonHeroes'': The titular Heroes are the SiblingTeam of Latios and Latias, with Latias being the GuestStarPartyMember. Ash and friends are the protagonists.
137* ''Anime/PokemonJirachiWishmaker'': While the film's primary focus is the friendship between Max and the titular Jirachi, the former is the clear SupportingProtagonist with Ash still TheHero.
138* ''Anime/PokemonLucarioAndTheMysteryOfMew'' is [[ZigZaggingTrope a mixed example]]. Lucario is TheHero (with Ash and friends being the {{supporting protagonist}}s this time), but Mew mostly serves a key role.
139* ''Anime/PokemonRangerAndTheTempleOfTheSea'': The story focuses on May and Manaphy. The titular ranger, Jack Walker, is the GuestStarPartyMember.
140* ''Anime/PrincessMononoke'': Not only is the main protagonist not the character referred to by the title (it's Ashitaka), the name "Princess Mononoke" itself is only used once in the film to refer to San, as it's a nickname given to her by the residents of Irontown.
141* ''WesternAnimation/TheProphet'': "The Prophet" refers to Mustafa, and while he's the primary focus, the protagonist is Almitra.
142* ''WesternAnimation/SleepingBeauty'': "Sleeping Beauty" refers to Aurora, but she's just a DecoyProtagonist and the real protagonists are the three fairies. Aurora has a total of eighteen lines of dialogue in the entire movie and the shortest screentime for any Disney heroine. The fairies, despite being treated as if they were sidekicks, have much more screentime (and dialogue) than Aurora or any other characters in the film, with the possible exception of Maleficent and Prince Phillip. They basically do everything for Aurora and to some extent, Prince Phillip.
143* ''WesternAnimation/SupermanBatmanApocalypse'' would have made more sense if it were called ''Superman/Supergirl: Apocalypse''. Batman gets nowhere near as much screen time and Wonder Woman appears as often as he does.
144* In ''Animation/WaltzWithBashir'', President Bashir is referred to but doesn't actually appear in the movie except on posters.
145* ''WesternAnimation/WendellAndWild'' is named for a pair of demon brothers but the film actually focuses on Kat, the human girl they strike a deal with.
146* ''Anime/WhenMarnieWasThere'' is about a girl named Anna who befriends the titular Marnie.
147* ''Anime/WolfChildren'': The protagonist is the titular children's StrugglingSingleMother, Hana.
148[[/folder]]
149
150[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
151* ''Film/FiveHundredDaysOfSummer'' follows Tom, the main character, as he tries to get over the fact that he and the titular character is/was never meant to be.
152* To the extent that there is a main character in ''Film/TheBakersWife'', it's the baker himself. His wife kicks off the plot by running off with another man, and the film doesn't focus much on her afterwards.
153* Film/{{Beetlejuice}} has less screentime in his own movie than any of the other characters. This is not the case in the [[WesternAnimation/{{Beetlejuice}} animated series]] that followed, though, where he is undoubtedly the star.
154* ''Film/TheBigLebowski'' refers to Jeffrey Lebowski, a millionaire for whom the protagonist ([[SignificantNameOverlap also christened Jeffrey Lebowski]], but goes by "The Dude") is mistaken. Walter refers to the former as "the other Lebowski, the Big Lebowski" in one line. This one gets it bad enough that even fans of the film who ''know'' there are two Lebowskis and that Bridges's character is primarily called the Dude, still talk about Jeff Bridges being "The Big Lebowski".
155* ''Film/TheBourneLegacy''. Jason Bourne is only be mentioned off-screen as the movie leaves the main character's seat to (who else?) his legacy.
156* The protagonist of ''Literature/TheBoyInTheStripedPyjamas'' is the young son of a Nazi officer who becomes acquainted with the boy of the title, who's a prisoner in a concentration camp. Some people were annoyed about this.
157* ''Literature/CharlieAndTheChocolateFactory'':
158** Although not the case in the original book (which had a different ProtagonistTitle), in the 1971 film ''Film/WillyWonkaAndTheChocolateFactory'', the titular Wonka, though an important character, is still just the owner of the titular factory to which the main protagonist Charlie wins a trip.
159** Ironically, the book's second adaptation ''Film/CharlieAndTheChocolateFactory'' is also an example because it kept the book's original title but changed the focus so that Wonka now ''is'' the main character.
160* Amy is only mentioned off-screen in ''Film/ChasingAmy'' as the ex-girlfriend of another secondary character.
161* ''Film/ChildrenOfTheNight'' refers to [[spoiler:the kids the villain used to feed while he was imprisoned.]]
162* In ''Film/ClairesKnee'', Claire doesn't show up until about halfway through and she's the least developed of all the major characters.
163* ''Film/{{Chupa}}'': Alex is technically the main protagonist, but the film is titled after Chupa, the young chupacabra who serves as the {{Deuteragonist}}. Justified, as while Alex is the protagonist, Chupa is the central character in the film.
164* Creator/JeanClaudeVanDamme's character is not the eponymous ''Film/{{Cyborg|1989}}'', it's the woman who was taken captive by the bad guys.
165* Franchise/DCExtendedUniverse: ''Film/BirdsOfPrey2020'' was more of a ComicBook/HarleyQuinn movie with the rest of the Birds being minor characters.
166* ''Film/DrStrangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb'': Dr. Strangelove is only in two scenes. [[OneSceneWonder Doesn't mean he didn't make a hell of an impact.]]
167* In ''Film/TheFactsInTheCaseOfMisterHollow'' Johnny Hollow is unseen, as the photographer who took the photo that's the subject of the film. His only "appearance" is via the text of a letter, warning the recipient, an OccultDetective viewpoint character, to "look closely."
168* In ''Film/{{Fido}}'', the titular character is the zombie butler of the main character and his family.
169* ''Film/ForgettingSarahMarshall'': The titular character is the ex-girlfriend of the protagonist, who spends about a quarter of the film trying to get over.
170* ''Film/{{Frankenstein|1931}}'': The titular ''Film/BrideOfFrankenstein'' doesn't appear until the last four minutes of the movie.
171* Gord's brother Freddy doesn't appear much in ''Film/FreddyGotFingered'' and Gord's pretense that their father molested him is only a minor plot point.
172* ''Film/TheGeneralsDaughter'': Captain Elizabeth Campbell is the impetus for the plot, but since it revolves around [[PlotTriggeringDeath the investigation of her murder]], she's neither one of the leads (Brenner, Sunhill), nor one of the bad guys ([[spoiler:Kent, General Campbell]]).
173* ''Film/GoldenSwallow'': The titular heroine in this sequel to ''Film/ComeDrinkWithMe'' has been greatly DemotedToExtra, playing second fiddle to the new hero Silver Roc.
174* ''Theatre/{{Harvey}}'' does not even conclusively establish Harvey's actual existence until well into the film, though he does drive a lot of the plot.
175* ''Film/{{Heathers}}'': The three "Heathers" (Heather Chandler, Heather Duke, and Heather [=McNamara=]) who lend the film its title are actually supporting characters, as Veronica is the protagonist and J.D. is the antagonist.
176* The protagonists of ''Film/HorribleBosses'' are their respective employees.
177* The protagonist of ''Film/ILoveYouPhillipMorris'' is Steven Russell, who loves Phillip Morris.
178* While several Film/JamesBond movies have a title [[AntagonistTitle in connection to the main villain]], ''Film/{{Octopussy}}'' has the distinction of being the only one named after the BondGirl.
179* The title character of ''Film/JohnnyGuitar'' played by Creator/SterlingHayden is the {{Deuteragonist}}, and in narrative terms the third most important character after TheHero Vienna and the BigBad Emma Small.
180* John Tucker is not the main character in ''Film/JohnTuckerMustDie''. Kate is.
181* ''Film/{{Junebug}}'' is the name the SupportingProtagonist's pregnant sister-in-law wants for her child once she gives birth. [[spoiler:[[ArtifactTitle She suffers]] [[TearJerker a miscarriage]].]]
182* ''Film/KenPark'' kills himself at the start of the movie. The rest of the movie is about his classmates.
183* ''Film/TheKidsAreAllRight'': The Kids refers to Joni and Laser, but the story focuses on their mothers and their GlorifiedSpermDonor.
184* ''Film/TheLastSamurai'' does not, [[CommonKnowledge as many people seemed to think]], refer to the main character Nathan Algren, but to the rebelling group of samurai led by Katsumoto. This is not helped by the fact that "samurai" can be either singular or plural in Japanese.
185* In ''Film/{{Laura}}'', Laura is the name of the woman whose murder the detective is investigating.
186* ''Film/TheMadAdventuresOfRabbiJacob'': The eponymous Rabbi Jacob doesn't have much screentime, it's all really about Victor Pivert (Creator/LouisDeFunes) impersonating him.
187* In Creator/ShawBrothers' take on ''Film/MarcoPolo'', Marco Polo is a spectator at most. The main heroes are the four brothers defending the Shaolin temple from Mongols, whose heroism are noted by Polo on his journey to China.
188* ''Film/MarketaLazarova'' doesn't play very large role in the plot. Mikoláš is the actual protagonist.
189* Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse: In a subtitle case, ''Film/CaptainAmericaTheWinterSoldier'', as it might be an AntagonistTitle, but it's not of the main villain. Then again, [[Comicbook/{{HYDRA}} the main villains]] -- who are employing the Winter Soldier's services -- are a big twist with franchise-wide impact, so focusing on the secondary antagonist makes for a lesser SpoilerTitle.
190* ''Film/MeetTheParents'': The Focker children in ''Little Fockers'' have neither many lines nor much screentime.
191* ''Film/MrNoLegs'' is titled after the main villain's enforcer, who is killed just before the climax.
192* In ''Film/{{Mud}}'', the titular character is only the {{Deuteragonist}} who is hiding from mercenaries/bounty hunters and is found and befriended by the KidHero protagonist and his [[TheLancer Lancer]].
193* In ''Film/MonOncleAntoine'', Antoine is a significant character, but the protagonist is his nephew Benoit and the story is told from Benoit's perspective.
194* ''Film/MyWeekWithMarilyn'' is told from Colin Clark's perspective.
195* The title character from ''Film/{{Oscar|1991}}'' doesn't actually show up until the last minute or two of the movie. While some of the earlier events of the film do revolve around him in some way, the real point of the title is as a nod to Creator/OscarWilde; both the film and [[Theatre/{{Oscar}} the play on which it's based]] pay homage to his style of humour.
196* ''Film/{{Paul}}'' is a CGI alien. The protagonist is the Graeme/Clive duo.
197* ''Film/ThePeopleUnderTheStairs'': The titular people are the Robesons' previous victims, trapped under the stairs after being mutilated.
198* ''Franchise/ThePinkPanther'':
199** There are no panthers, pink or otherwise, in the first movie or any of its sequels, outside of the animated opening credits, which are not part of the plot. The title especially does not refer to Inspector Clouseau, the moronic detective central to (most) of the films' plot. The title refers to a giant pink diamond with a panther-shaped flaw, and even the diamond only appears in two films: ''Film/ThePinkPanther1963'' and ''Film/TheReturnOfThePinkPanther''.
200** The second film in the series, ''Film/AShotInTheDark'', shows that the Panther was not intended to be the series' title, but the third film features the return of the diamond, and thus uses the Panther in its title. After that, it was inescapably known as the "Pink Panther series", and thus, each subsequent film used the name in their titles, even though the diamond never appeared again.
201** While most of the titles are just nonsensical and could refer to anything (''Film/ThePinkPantherStrikesAgain'' could even refer to Dreyfuss, the film's villain), the final title, ''Film/SonOfThePinkPanther'' seems to overtly suggest that Clouseau is indeed whom the name "Pink Panther" refers to.
202* ''Film/ThePrincessBride'': Buttercup, the titular bride, is the LoveInterest of both TheHero Westley and the BigBad Prince Humperdinck.
203* The protagonist of ''Film/RachelGettingMarried'' is Rachel's younger sister Kym.
204* In all three ''Film/ReAnimator'' movies, the main character is Herbert West's protege, not Dr. West himself.
205* The titular character of ''Film/Rebecca1940'' was [[PosthumousCharacter already dead before the movie even began]]; however, the disproportionate influence her memory still has over the other characters is central to the story.
206* In ''Film/{{Roberta}}'', Stephanie is the main character. Her boyfriend's Aunt Minnie is the original Roberta, but she dies not long into the movie.
207* ''Film/TheRockyHorrorPictureShow''. Extra points for sounding like a WordSaladTitle, rather than anything to do with the characters at all, to people who aren't very familiar with the plot.
208* ''Film/RubySparks'' is the girlfriend of the main character Calvin [[PygmalionPlot who made her from his imagination]].
209* ''Film/SavingPrivateRyan'' is, as the title suggests, about the soldiers sent to save Private Ryan. [[spoiler: Private Ryan doesn't appear until the film's third act.]]
210* ''Film/SilentTongue'' takes its name from Eamon's runaway wife who--although her shadow looms large over the events--only appears in flashback. [[spoiler:And very briefly as Eamon is taken to meet his fate.]]
211* ''Franchise/StarWars'', ''Film/TheLastJedi'': The title refers to Luke (or Rey, [[DoubleMeaningTitle depending on how you interpret the title]]), but the film very much belongs to his nephew [[VillainProtagonist Kylo Ren]].
212* The protagonist of ''Film/TheStrongMan'' is Paul, Zandow the strong man's bumbling assistant, who has a series of misadventures while trying to find his pen pal girlfriend. Zandow is only in four scenes.
213* ''Film/{{Ted}}'': The titular character is protagonist John Bennett's sentient toy. Ted is the main character of [[Film/Ted2 the sequel]], though.
214* ''Film/TheThinMan'': The man of the title is the victim, not one of the protagonists or the villain. This didn't prevent the sequels from using him as an ArtifactTitle, even though his deceased character has nothing to do with their plots.
215* The identity of ''Film/TheThirdMan'' is itself [[DrivingQuestion a mystery]] for much of the film; it refers to an unidentified third person a witness claims he saw carrying the protagonist's dying friend Harry Lime away from a car accident, while the other two men insist they were alone. [[spoiler:But it's all a coverup; Lime is alive, and is the person the witness saw; the body was another victim entirely who is now [[FakingTheDead buried in Lime's grave]].]]
216* ''Film/{{Trancers}}'': The protagonist is Jack Deth. The Trancers are the {{Big Bad}}'s mind slaves.
217* The live-action ''Film/{{Transformers|FilmSeries}}'' movies. The fact that the Transformers are secondary characters in the movies named after them is a frequent subject of mockery, due to the fact that they were the main characters in other incarnations of the franchise.
218* ''Film/{{Tron}}'' and ''Film/TronLegacy'' are about Kevin Flynn and his son. Tron is a minor character in both of them.
219* ''Film/{{Tumbleweed}}'' is named after the horse Jim Logan is loaned when he sets off on his ClearMyName mission. It avoids being a TrivialTitle because Tumbleweed's talents prove vital in allowing Jim to survive and succeed.
220* ''Film/WakingNedDevine'' is a pretty interesting example, considering the only time Ned actually appears on screen, it's [[spoiler:his dead body, having died from shock after learning that he won the lottery. The rest of the movie is about two old men pretending he's still alive to collect this winnings.]]
221* ''Film/WhoFramedRogerRabbit'': Roger Rabbit is not actually the main character. He's just the one who solicits the services of the story's actual protagonist, human PrivateDetective Eddie Valiant. Roger steals every scene he's in and is pivotal to the case, though.
222[[/folder]]
223
224[[folder:Literature]]
225* ''Literature/{{Aimee}}'': The protagonist is not Aimee, but her best friend who is accused of killing her. In fact, the protagonist isn't named until the end of the book. [[spoiler:Her name is Zoe.]]
226* Constance Greene's young adult novels in the ''Alexandra'' series (such as ''Al(exandra) the Great'') are all named after the narrator's best friend. The narrating character is never even given a name.
227* The young adult novel ''Amandine'' by Adele Griffon is named after the protagonist's eccentric (and later somewhat antagonistic) friend.
228* Creator/IsaacAsimov:
229** "Literature/FeminineIntuition": The 1970 German translation, "Jane 5", promotes the prototype robot to titular importance, despite not ever speaking on-screen.
230** "Literature/GalleySlave": The title refers to [[RobotNames robot EZ-27]], constructed to do proofreading, grading, and the other miscellany mental drudgery that occurs in universities.
231** "Literature/{{Lenny}}": Lenny, the InSeriesNickname for LNE models, was built for mining boron from asteroids. However, due to an accident during the initial planning, it doesn't work correctly.
232** "Literature/{{Sally}}": Sally is Jake's favorite [[AutomatedAutomobiles self-driving car]], but he's the viewpoint protagonist and the one who changes over the course of the story.
233** "Literature/TheUglyLittleBoy": Both versions of the title refer to Timmie, whose role in the story is to be cared for by Edith Fellowes. The story follows her perspective and actions, her role within Stasis Incorporated as Timmie's caretaker. Usually, we only discover what Timmie is feeling based on what she's telling the other characters.
234* ''Literature/TheBlackArrow'' is named after the outlaw gang who have vowed to take revenge against Sir Daniel Brackley. Dick Shelton, the main character and Sir Daniel's protégé, opposed them until he found out his mentor killed his father, whereupon he runs off and joins the outlaws.
235* ''Literature/BrideOfTheRatGod'': The "bride" refers to the actress Christine, but her cousin Norah is the central character.
236* ''Literature/TheButterflyKid'' is named for a very minor secondary character--albeit one who gets the plot rolling. Its sequel, ''Literature/TheUnicornGirl'', is also named for a secondary character, though a much more important one: the hero's potential love interest.
237* ''Literature/TheCalfOfTheNovemberCloud'': The main character is Konyek, who goes through Hell to retrieve the eponymous calf, keeping her safe and bring her back to his village.
238* Alexander Pushkin's ''Literature/TheCaptainsDaughter'' is named after the main character's love interest.
239* ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfNarnia'': ''Literature/TheLionTheWitchAndTheWardrobe'' pulls a trifecta by being titled after a secondary character (Aslan), the villain (Jadis the White Witch), ''and'' a gateway to another dimension.
240* ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfPrydain'' are about a young man named Taran and the adventures he experiences on the path to adulthood in the country of Prydain. The final book in the series, ''The High King'', refers to the ruler of the country. [[spoiler:This is ultimately a subversion of the trope, however, because Taran himself is named High King of Prydain at the very end of the story.]]
241* In ''Literature/CudjosCave'', Cudjo (an African-born escaped slave) has been living in the eponymous cave longer than any of his three companions but has less of an arc than any of them.
242* The protagonist of ''Literature/DaisyMiller'' is Frederick Winterbourne, who falls in love with Daisy.
243* In ''Literature/DearMrHenshaw'', Boyd Henshaw is more of a plot device than an actual character; the real protagonist is sixth-grader Leigh Botts.
244* The first of the Tiffany Aching books in ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' is called ''Literature/TheWeeFreeMen'', after the Nac Mac Feegles, a group of rebellious "pictsies" ([[InsistentTerminology NOT "pixies"]]) who assist Tiffany, but she's the main protagonist. [[SpotlightStealingSquad The Feegles ARE quite memorable, however.]]
245* Creator/DrSeuss:
246** ''Literature/TheCatInTheHat'' is the tritagonist: the protagonist and deuteragonist are the boy and girl he visits. (Though in fairness, the cat does do more of the talking than they do.)
247** ''Literature/TheLorax'': The focus in on the Once-ler, not on the Lorax.
248* ''Literature/FlowersForAlgernon'' refers to the protagonist's fellow test subject -- a white rat. Perhaps to avert the trope, the film adaptation was renamed ''Charly''.
249* ''Literature/{{Frankenstein}}''. The focus is not on the scientist Victor Frankenstein but on his creation "Frankenstein's Monster". Of course, [[IAmNotShazam many people think "Frankenstein"]] ''[[IAmNotShazam is]]'' [[IAmNotShazam the name of the monster.]]
250* ''Literature/TheGiver'' is about the boy who's been selected to replace the Giver.
251* ''Literature/GivesLight'' is the surname of the main character's best friend [[StraightGay and love interest]], a Plains Shoshone boy. It's also the surname of his father, a serial killer who murdered the main character's mother years ago.
252* ''Literature/TheIndianInTheCupboard'' is about the kid whose cupboard the Indian is in.
253* The protagonist of ''Literature/JessicasGhost'' is Francis, who learns to open up and make friends with help from the titular character.
254* ''Literature/JohnDiesAtTheEnd'': Dave is the narrator and central character. John is his Cloudcuckoolander best friend.
255* The ''Literature/LandOfOz'' series does this a ''lot''. In fact, any book in the series that has a character's name in its title is far more likely to have that character as an important secondary character or occasionally the {{Deuteragonist}} -- with a few notable exceptions, they're very rarely the primary protagonist.
256** The first book in the series, ''Literature/TheWonderfulWizardOfOz'' is named for a character who, while important to the plot, isn't actually in the book all that much. The story centers on Dorothy and her three companions who seek the help of the titular wizard, who only actually appears in a few chapters.
257** ''Literature/OzmaOfOz'' also stars Dorothy as the main protagonist; Ozma doesn't show up until a bit into the book, and is pretty much a secondary character.
258** ''Literature/ThePatchworkGirlOfOz'' is the origin story of Scraps the Patchwork Girl, and she is certainly a major and important character in the book (as well as a bit of a BreakoutCharacter and fan favorite), but the main protagonist is actually Ojo the Unlucky, and the book centers around his quest to restore his petrified uncle.
259** ''Literature/TikTokOfOz'' is mostly an EnsembleCast without a clear protagonist, but Betsy Bobbin, Queen Ann and the Shaggy Man all have notably larger and more important roles than Tik-Tok, who mostly plays a supporting role.
260** ''Literature/TheScarecrowOfOz'' is really about Trot and Cap'n Bill, and eventually Button-Bright. The Scarecrow doesn't appear until half the book is over, and while he plays a central role when he does appear, it's very blatantly not his story.
261** ''Literature/RinkitinkInOz'' does have the titular King Rinkitink in a large role throughout, but the main character is the young Prince Inga.
262** ''Literature/GlindaOfOz'' is about Dorothy and Ozma far more than Glinda, though Glinda does play an important role in organizing and leading the rescue party to save the two princesses from danger.
263* ''Literature/LookingForAlaska''. Whilst Alaska is a main character, the focus is more on Pudge.
264* ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'': The Lord of the Rings is the villain. The volume ''Return of the King'' refers to the SupportingLeader Aragorn.
265* The protagonist (and narrator) of ''Literature/LornaDoone'' is her love interest John Ridd.
266* ''Literature/MalazanBookOfTheFallen'': ''Literature/TheCrippledGod'', the last book in the series, is named after an important but rarely seen character. For most of the series it actually looks like it's going to be a case of AntagonistTitle as the Crippled God is the instigator and ManBehindTheMan of most of the conflicts within the series, but then turns out to be a little fish in the pond of the BigBadEnsemble and himself in need of rescue.
267* Hawthorne Abendsen, ''Literature/TheManInTheHighCastle'', is a minor character.
268* Creator/GeorgeMacDonaldFraser's ''Literature/McAuslan'' series has Lt. [=MacNeill=] as the protagonist, and there are stories where [=McAuslan=] plays only a minor role at best.
269* ''Literature/TheMillenniumTrilogy'': Regardless of the title of each installment, the protagonist of the series has always been Mikael Blomkvist.
270* ''Literature/MobyDick'' is really about Ishmael and Captain Ahab; the eponymous Moby Dick is an enormous sperm whale that serves as Ahab's AnimalNemesis.
271* Several of Creator/HRiderHaggard's novels are named after the hero's love interest, even if she is not the main focus. For example, ''Nada the Lily'' is about the hero Umslopogaas, the illegitimate son of the great Zulu king and general Chaka.
272* ''Literature/{{Neuromancer}}'', to the extent that we don't even find out that "Neuromancer" is a character until late in the final act. [[spoiler:It turns out that Wintermute's mission to infiltrate the Villa Straylight has actually been part of its attempt to merge with Neuromancer, its twin ArtificialIntelligence, to become capable of growing past the limits of its programming.]] Also a case of SmallRoleBigImpact.
273* Creator/IsaacAsimov and Creator/JanetAsimov's ''Literature/TheNorbyChronicles'': The main character is Jefferson Wells, a [[SpaceCadet cadet in the Space Academy]]. The title character is Norby, who was purchased to be Jeff's [[RobotBuddy teaching robot]]. Instead Norby tends to drag him into insane adventures involving aliens from [[TimeTravel other times]] and other dimensions.
274* ''Literature/ThePhantomOfTheOpera'' is titled after its antagonist but the actual story centres around Christine or more accurately the SupportingProtagonist Raoul, whose POV is where the majority of the story is set. In fact the title character himself only appears a handful of times throughout the novel.
275* ''Literature/ThePrisonerOfZenda'': The protagonist is the man attempting to rescue the prisoner, who barely features.
276* The protagonist of ''Literature/{{Rebecca}}'' is the second Mrs. de Winter (whose first name is never given). Rebecca herself is a PosthumousCharacter.
277* ''Literature/TheRedVixenAdventures'': The series as a whole and half the individual titles refer to the Red Vixen, a character with very little actual screen time [[spoiler:(and most of that is spent as her SecretIdentity, Lady Melanie)]] and the story is never told from her perspective.
278* The narrator of Creator/WalterScott's ''Literature/RobRoy'' is Frank Osbaldistone.
279* In ''Literature/SavingZoe'', Zoë is the main character Echo's late sister, who was murdered. The book revolves around Echo finding Zoë's diary and reading it.
280* ''Literature/TheScarletPimpernel'': The protagonist is the eponymous hero's wife Marguerite.
281* The ''Literature/SkulduggeryPleasant'' books are mostly told from the point of view of his protegee, Valkyrie Cain.
282* The title of the historical fiction novel ''Literature/TheSunneInSplendour'' refers to UsefulNotes/EdwardIV, but the novel's protagonist is his little brother, the future UsefulNotes/RichardIII, though Edward is a fascinating and charismatic secondary character.
283* ''Literature/TheThinMan'' is not detective Nick Charles, but Clyde Wynant, the man he is looking for. The confusion was not helped by the fact that [[Film/TheThinMan the movie version]] spawned a series of sequels, all of which included "the Thin Man" in their title.
284* ''Literature/TheThreeMusketeers'' is about D'Artagnan, the fourth musketeer.
285* The unfinished epic ''Literature/{{Titurel}}'' by medieval poet Wolfram von Eschenbach -a prequel to his romance epic ''Literature/{{Parzival}}''- was named by scholars after the first name mentioned in the surviving text. Titurel does not actually appear in the story, he is merely one of the protagonist's ancestors.
286* ''Literature/TheSwordOfSaintFerdinand'': The main character is not the titular King Ferdinand III but his soldiers García and Diego de Vargas.
287* ''Literature/WhenMarnieWasThere'' is about a girl named Anna who befriends the titular Marnie.
288[[/folder]]
289
290[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
291* ''Series/{{Boris}}'': Even if the show has an EnsembleCast, Boris is just a goldfish and a completely irrelevant LivingProp. He belongs to the director of the ShowWithinAShow, who is the only one who seems to care about the existence of this goldfish.
292* ''Series/DontTrustTheBInApartment23'' is named after Chloe, [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin the bitch in apartment 23]], but the series' main protagonist is Chloe's new roommate June. Chloe is still the second most prominent character in the series, though, and several episodes do revolve mainly around her.
293* ''Series/FamilyMatters'': Though it was originally supposed to be a show about a family, from season 2 onwards the main protagonist is Steve Urkel who is not part of the main family (the Winslows) but just a neighbor. All the members of the Winslow family gradually become {{Satellite Character}}s to him.
294* ''Series/GossipGirl'' is a minor character on the show. [[spoiler:Subverted, as [[{{GIRL}} "she"]] is actually one of the main characters,]]
295* ''Series/GoodLuckCharlie'' is named for the nickname (real name is Charlotte) of the baby sister of the main character [[GenderBlenderName Teddy]], who [[FramingDevice is making a series of video diaries for Charlie to watch in the future]], [[EveryEpisodeEnding all of which end]] with Teddy telling her, "[[TitleDrop Good luck, Charlie]]". In the latter two seasons, Charlie becomes the {{deuteragonist}}, being given her own character development.
296* ''Series/HowIMetYourMother'' is the story of how TheHero met his OneTrueLove, [[EleventhHourRanger who isn't even properly introduced to him until the last five minutes of the series finale]].
297* ''Series/LifeWithDerek'': The protagonist is Casey, and the title refers to her new life with her stepbrother.
298* ''Series/TheLordOfTheRingsTheRingsOfPower'': Galadriel might the protagonist overall, but is Sauron after whom the show is named.
299* ''Series/RaisingHope'': The main character is not the titular baby. The show focuses on Jimmy, Hope's young father, and his bumbling family who support him in raising newborn child Hope.
300* This is parodied in ''Series/ThatMitchellAndWebbLook'' with a sketch about TheFilmOfTheBook of the abovementioned ''Literature/{{Rebecca}}'', where [[ExecutiveMeddling the studio insists]] that if the film is going to be called ''Rebecca'', it has to be ''about'' Rebecca. As a result, she spends the whole movie listening to people talk about what it'll be like when she's dead and her husband's second wife moves in.
301* ''Series/SwampThing2019'': The protagonist is Abby Arcane, and much of the story is her trying to find ways to cure the title character from his supposed mutation. Then TheReveal that the title character didn't actually mutate and that the {{deuteragonist}} whom he thought was him is DeadAllAlong, making him the tritagonist overall.
302* ''Series/TinMan'': The protagonist is DG, not the Tin Man, Cain.
303[[/folder]]
304
305[[folder:Music]]
306* It wasn't uncommon at all for rock bands in TheSixties to be named after the founding member, even if, instead of being the lead singer, they were the guitarist (Spencer Davis Group, Music/JeffBeck Group), the keyboardist (Music/ManfredMann, Music/PaulRevereAndTheRaiders) or the drummer (The Dave Clark Five). Continuing into TheSeventies, we have Music/VanHalen (Eddie and Alex Van Halen were the guitarist and drummer, respectively) and Music/TheJGeilsBand (J. Geils was the guitarist).
307* "There's a Guy Works Down the Chip Shop Swears He's Elvis" by Music/KirstyMaccoll. The protagonist is the narrator's probably unfaithful lover; the guy down the chip shop ("he's a liar") is just someone the real protagonist gets compared to.
308* Venga'''boys''' can somewhat be applied to this trope, due to the fact that the lead vocalists of the group [[NonIndicativeName are female]], [[LesserStar and the other two members]] [[EgocentricTeamNaming are male]].
309[[/folder]]
310
311[[folder:Theatre]]
312* ''Theatre/TheBarberOfSeville'' also applies. Figaro is a relatively major character, but Almaviva is the protagonist.
313* ''Theatre/ByeByeBirdie'': The title refers to rock star [[NoCelebritiesWereHarmed Conrad]] [[Music/ElvisPresley Birdie]], who plays a major role, but Conrad's manager, Albert, and his secretary are the main characters.
314* The principal characters of the ballet ''Don Quixote'' are the young lovers, Basilio and Kitri. Don Quixote and Sancho Panza are secondary mime parts. Not surprising, as the adaptation is InNameOnly, anyway.
315* The title character of ''Theatre/FiddlerOnTheRoof'' never speaks, and only appears a few times in the show. Tevye is the main character.
316* ''Theatre/{{Gypsy}}'' refers to Gypsy Rose Lee, the stage name Louise acquires halfway through the second act. Her mother is the principal character.
317* ''Theatre/{{Iolanthe}}'' gives the titular character less to act and sing about than other major characters, despite her importance in the plot. The protagonist is her son, Strephon.
318* The main character of Mikhail Glinka's ''A Life for the Tzar'', a name suggested by Nikolai I, is in fact Ivan Susanin. The title was changed under Soviet rule to that of its hero.
319* Victor Hugo's ''Lucrezia Borgia''. Lucrezia is at most a deuteragonist. The main character is Genarro, [[spoiler:her abandonned incest-born son]].
320* ''Marvin's Room''. Marvin has absolutely no lines (he's senile and bedridden, you see), and the story is about his two daughters and one of his grandsons.
321* In ''Theatre/TheMikado'', the title character doesn't make his entrance until well into the second act. The protagonist is his only son, Nanki-Poo.
322* The opera ''Paul Bunyan'' introduces Paul Bunyan as the hero of its story, but he remains ShroudedInMyth and [[TheVoice never appears onstage]]. The real protagonist is Hel Helson.
323* The Nibelung in Richard Wagner's ''Theatre/TheRingOfTheNibelung'' is Alberich, but the central character of the tetralogy as a whole is Wotan, even though there is no character who appears in all four parts. Brünnhilde, the titular character of ''Theatre/TheValkyrie'', is also probably an example as the opera is mostly about Wotan and his mortal children Siegmund and Sieglinde (the latter is the only character who appears in all three acts), while Brünnhilde in this opera is primarily defined as Wotan's alter ego--she tries to do what he can't because he is constrained by his obligations to treaties and the law.
324* Several Shakespearean examples, because in his day usually the character of the highest rank, not the main character, got the title (but not always, vide ''Hamlet'').
325** ''Theatre/{{Cymbeline}}'': The main character is Imogen.
326** ''Theatre/HenryIV'' parts 1 and 2: The main characters are Prince Hal and Falstaff.
327** ''Theatre/JuliusCaesar'': Caesar dies less than halfway through; the main character is Brutus.
328** ''Theatre/TheMerchantOfVenice'': Most people assume that the title refers to the villain, Shylock, but it actually refers to Antonio. The actual protagonist of the play is up for debate.
329* ''Theatre/{{Slowgirl}}'' has one that may be regarded as especially [[TrivialTitle trivial.]] "Slowgirl" is the nickname of Becky's classmate Marybeth, who never appears in the story (as there are only two characters, Becky and Sterling.) Becky talks about her a lot and she is an especially important part of Becky's backstory, but she's actually Dead All Along and an ultimately fairly minor character.
330* ''Theatre/WaitingForGodot'': The main characters are Vladimir and Estragon, who are [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin waiting for Godot]]. [[TheGhost Godot doesn't even appear in the play.]]
331[[/folder]]
332
333[[folder:Radio]]
334* ''Radio/XMinusOne'': In "[[Recap/XMinusOneE095MartianSam Martian Sam]]", the title is based on one of the characters on the baseball team. The story, however, [[CharacterNarrator is told from Joe's perspective]].
335[[/folder]]
336
337[[folder:Video Games]]
338* You'd be surprised how little ''VideoGame/{{Anna}}'' actually features in her own game. In fact, it's debatable if she appears ''at all''.
339* The Arkham Knight from ''VideoGame/BatmanArkhamKnight'', while still extremely important, is TheDragon to the game's real BigBad, Scarecrow.
340* ''VideoGame/BornUnderTheRain'': The title is the meaning of the name of a secondary protagonist. That character is [[spoiler:Masika]], which is revealed in TheNamesake fashion.
341* Chicory is the deuteragonist of ''VideoGame/ChicoryAColorfulTale''. She is the artist who motivates [[PlayerCharacter Pizza's]] journey and the story is just as much about her as it is about Pizza.
342* Seen in a few installments of the ''VideoGame/DarkParables''; the fourth game is called ''The Red Riding Hood Sisters'' and the fifth is ''The Final Cinderella.'' The actual protagonist of all of the games is a woman known as the Fairy Tale Detective.
343* In ''VideoGame/{{Hades}}'', the PlayerCharacter is Prince Zagreus, while the Lord of the Dead himself is Zagreus's father and [[spoiler:the FinalBoss]]. That said, the title might actually refer to the setting since "Hades" is also a name for the Underworld itself.
344* The Knight in ''VideoGame/HollowKnight'' isn't actually the title character; rather the Hollow Knight is an emotionless Vessel meant to be immune to the Infection while the Knight himself is a failed Vessel who wasn't chosen to seal the Radiance. However, in one of the endings [[spoiler:the Knight defeats the Hollow Knight and takes his place, effectively becoming the new Hollow Knight]].
345%%* ''VideoGame/TheImmortal'' (obvious, since there's EverythingTryingToKillYou)
346* ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'': The player character and protagonist is Link (though [[HelloInsertNameHere you can choose his name in most games]]). Princess Zelda is the {{Deuteragonist}}.
347** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaLinksAwakening'', ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaMajorasMask'', and ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTriForceHeroes'' don't even feature Zelda (besides a flashback in ''Majora's Mask'', her dress as an obtainable costume in ''Tri Force Heroes'', and Link apparently mistaking Marin for her at the beginning of ''Link's Awakening'').
348** In ''VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink'', ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast'', ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaLinksAwakening'', and ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkBetweenWorlds'', Link's name actually is in the title.
349** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTwilightPrincess'': [[spoiler:Link's companion in this game, Midna, is the Twilight Princess. The game initially has a RedHerring hint that it's Zelda by having Midna teasingly call her that at one point, as her kingdom has fallen under twilight]].
350** The [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOracleGames Oracle Games]], ''Oracle of Ages'' and ''Oracle of Seasons'', are named for their respective [[DamselInDistress Damsels in Distress]], Nayru and Din. Zelda only appears in the games when they're started with a code gained by completing the other game in the duology.
351** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaSpiritTracks'' is notable in that Zelda has a much stronger presence than in most games as Link's companion. It's also the only mainline ''Legend of Zelda'' game where she is even playable during some sections.
352** Averted by the infamous ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaCDiGames Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon]]'' and ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaCDiGames Zelda's Adventure]]'', where Zelda really is the protagonist and player character (not that it matters, since the CD-i games aren't canonical to the series).
353** To push the irony even further, the one game where it can be argued that she is the true main character over Link is ''VideoGame/HyruleWarriorsAgeOfCalamity'', which does not have "The Legend of Zelda" mentioned anywhere on the title.
354* ''VideoGame/{{Lisa}}'': Lisa herself only appears in one of the games, outside of as a hallucination. [[ItWasHisSled Her death]], however, kickstarts the plot of all games onward.
355* ''VideoGame/{{Lufia}}''. Even worse in the sequels, where Lufia isn't even ''in'' the game. [[spoiler:At least, not under that name.]]
356* ''Franchise/{{Metroid}}'':
357** The [[VideoGame/Metroid1 first game]] and the whole series are named after [[PersonalSpaceInvader the species]] the villains are using as biological weapons.
358** In ''VideoGame/MetroidIIReturnOfSamus'' and its remake ''VideoGame/MetroidSamusReturns'', Metroids are the main antagonists, making it an AntagonistTitle.
359** [[ZigZaggingTrope Zig-zagged]] throughout the series -- later games reveal "Metroid" to be a Chozo word roughly meaning "ultimate warrior", which Samus quite definitely is; meaning that everyone who [[IAmNotShazam mistakenly referred to Samus as Metroid]] are technically correct. [[spoiler:Eventually, it becomes a ProtagonistTitle in ''VideoGame/MetroidDread'', where it's revealed that Samus has been slowly turning into a humanoid Metroid since she was infused with Metroid DNA in ''Metroid Fusion'', even dubbed by her enemies as the "Ultimate Metroid".]]
360** ''VideoGame/SuperMetroid'' is both this and a SuperTitle64Advance as the "Super Metroid" is [[spoiler:the baby Metroid that becomes giant-sized and plays a crucial role in the climax]].
361** ''VideoGame/MetroidPrime'' is an AntagonistTitle.
362** ''VideoGame/MetroidFusion'' refers to Samus's transformation into a HalfHumanHybrid.
363* In ''VideoGame/PrincessTomatoInTheSaladKingdom'', the protagonist and player character is Sir Cucumber, who must rescue the eponymous princess.
364* ''VideoGame/{{Roki}}'': The protagonist's name is Tove; Roki is the name of the son of the BigBad, whose love for him is the driving motivation for her villainy.
365* ''VideoGame/SonicBattle'': Despite his name being in the title, Sonic only does two major things in the story. Discovering Emerl, [[spoiler:and destroying him when he goes haywire.]] Instead, much of the focus is on Emerl developing into a sapient individual.
366* As mentioned under Film, this is something in the ''Tron'' series.
367** In ''VideoGame/TronMazeATron'', Flynn is the main character.
368** In ''[[VideoGame/TronTwoPointOh Tron 2.0]]'', it's Jet Bradley as the main character. Tron himself is completely absent, having disappeared years before the game begins, but his legacy code still plays a part in the story.
369** ''VideoGame/TronEvolution'' only has Tron in the opening. He's shuffled out of the plot after the first chapter, due to the film, ''Film/TronLegacy,'' mentioned above.
370* A common gripe about the "Wrath of the Lich King" expansion for ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' was that the [[AntagonistTitle titular villain]] got very little screen time and spends pretty much the whole expansion as OrcusOnHisThrone. Another common opinion is that he got too much screen time and popped up everywhere, so that when you faced him in the final battle, he had lost much of his effect as a godlike entity who would be impossible to defeat, you had simply gotten too familiar with him letting you run off after killing a boss.
371* Cross of ''VideoGame/XenobladeChroniclesX'' serves as a witness to the plot which is about humanity's survival with [[TheLeader Elma]] at the helm, although [[http://iwataasks.nintendo.com/interviews/#/wiiu/xenoblade-chronicles-x/0/5 symbolically]], the "X" represents alien life of the unknown [[spoiler:which Elma is an alien herself.]]
372[[/folder]]
373
374[[folder:Visual Novels]]
375* ''VisualNovel/DateALiveRinneUtopia'' has the eponymous Rinne Sonogami, the final heroine that [[Literature/DateALive the subtitle-less franchise]]'s protagonist, Shido Itsuka, can date.
376* Not by name, but the title of ''VisualNovel/DaughterForDessert'' refers to Amanda.
377* ''VisualNovel/ILoveYouColonelSanders'': The LoveInterest of the protagonist is Colonel Sanders.
378* ''VisualNovel/{{Melody}}'' is named after the {{Deuteragonist}} of the story.
379* ''VisualNovel/{{Tsukihime}}'': The title (Moon Princess) refers to Arcueid Brunestud, whom the protagonist Shiki Tohno meets at the start of the story.
380[[/folder]]
381
382[[folder:Web Animation]]
383* The titular Girl-chan in ''WebAnimation/GirlChanInParadise'' appears only a handful of times (it's implied she and Swirly Glasses are traveling with the group, but even in group shots they rarely appear) and contributes absolutely nothing but [[MsFanservice blatant fanservice]] (or [[FanDisservice the exact opposite]] thanks to [[DerangedAnimation the art style]]).
384* ''WebAnimation/HomestarRunner'': Regardless of what the creators might say, Strong Bad has pretty much taken over as the main character.
385* ''WebAnimation/InvaderZimAVeryTallProblem'': Almighty Tallest Red and Purple are the show's {{Villain Protagonist}}s whom the titular Zim serves.
386[[/folder]]
387
388[[folder:Webcomics]]
389* ''Webcomic/{{Kurami}}'': Ana Kirkland is the main character, while Kurami is the infant cousin whom she is raising. To avoid confusion, author Deon Parson announced in January 2016 that he'd be changing the strip's name to ''Life With Kurami''.
390* ''Webcomic/LotusCobraIsEvil'': With the OneWordTitle [[https://i.imgur.com/xslL0PJ.jpg "Gary"]] strip, named for the character who's being posed questions.
391* ''Webcomic/{{Oglaf}}'': The eponymous Oglaf has shown up maybe a handful of times in the entire comic.
392* ''Webcomic/RustyAndCo'': Rustry is a party member and the series' mascot, but the lead character is clearly Mimic.
393* ''Webcomic/UnicornJelly'': The real main character is arguably Chou, who does most of the heavy lifting and gets most of the focus, especially towards the end. The POV character is Lupiko (most of the time). Uni, the title character, is just the supporting TeamPet.
394* ''Webcomic/{{Zelfia}}'': The ''character'' Zelfia has appeared exactly three times. The title refers more to the series' ArcWords.
395[[/folder]]
396
397[[folder:Western Animation]]
398* ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingChanAndTheChanClan'': Half true. Film/CharlieChan only would appear at the beginning and end of the episodes which mainly dealt with his kids engaging in ''WesternAnimation/ScoobyDoo'' antics.
399* ''WesternAnimation/TheDragonPrince'': The main characters are Callum, Rayla and Ezran, yet the title character is an egg later infant dragon who the main characters have to bring to his mother to stop a war between the Human Kingdoms and the magical land of Xadia.
400* ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'': Timmy Turner is the main protagonist. The title characters grant his wishes, teach him lessons, and generally serve as [[ParentalSubstitute parental substitutes]], since his actual parents constantly neglect him.
401* ''WesternAnimation/FostersHomeForImaginaryFriends'': Bloo & Mac are the protagonists. Neither of the Fosters are the main character: Madame Foster is the owner of the titular home who takes in "abandoned" imaginary friends (including Mac's friend Bloo), while her granddaughter Frankie is the caretaker. Out of the titular imaginary friends, Bloo is the {{Deuteragonist}}.
402* ''WesternAnimation/{{Gawayn}}'': The heroes are searching for the crystal of Gawayn in order to break the curse on Princess Gwendolyn, but it is not clear who Gawayn actually is (or was), though presumably he's meant to be the one from Arthurian legend.
403* ''MyDadTheBountyHunter'': The title refers to Terry, the father of the protagonists Sean and Lisa.
404* In ''WesternAnimation/MyGoldfishIsEvil'', Beanie is the protagonist. The titular goldfish is his pet and the villian of the series.
405* ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'' arguably became this after [[SpotlightStealingSquad Perry and Doofenshmirtz]] started getting more focus than the two titular stepbrothers in later seasons.
406* ''WesternAnimation/PixelPinkie'': Nina is the main protagonist while the titular Pixel Pinkie is the deuteragonist.
407* ''WesternAnimation/StarTrekLowerDecks'': In "[[Recap/StarTrekLowerDecksS1E07MuchAdoAboutBoimler Much Ado About Boimler]]", Boimler gets his name in the episode's title, but he is only the focus of the episode's B-plot -- the A-plot focuses on Mariner instead.
408* ''WesternAnimation/ScoobyDoo'': Changes from series to series as each series has a different number of characters, with Scooby typically receiving more focus the less characters there are. But in the series that feature the full gang, Scooby-Doo almost always receives very little focus and is more of an extra.
409* ''WesternAnimation/TronUprising'' is about [[TheCowl Beck]] acting as Tron under his order, not about Tron himself.
410* ''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBrothers'' zigzags this. Hank and Dean Venture are distinctly not the main characters of the series, but how prominent they are ranges from season to season. In the first three seasons, Rusty Venture, Brock Samson, and the Monarch all tend to have stronger claims to protagonist status and have much more involved arcs, with the boys generally coming across as TheDividual, [[TheLoad rarely affecting the plot]], and being around more for comedy than drama. Even an in-universe summary declared that Rusty was the real main character. In Season 4, however, they get significantly more CharacterFocus and go through DivergentCharacterEvolution, developing significant story arcs of their own while some prior characters flit in and OutOfFocus (particularly Brock) once their arcs were finished. By Season 7 or so, the large ensemble cast means that the show doesn't particularly have a single protagonist, but Hank and Dean are definitely good candidates. It's further played with by the season 2 opening on Rusty and his newly discovered twin brother Jonas Jr., though Jonas Jr. was never more than secondary character throughout the show. The finale gives another meaning to the title "Venture Brothers", as [[spoiler:it's revealed Malcom aka The Monarch is a modified clone of Rusty]].
411* ''WesternAnimation/WatsPig'': Wat is the protagonist, his brother the king is the {{deuteragonist}}, and the pig...is present.
412* ''WesternAnimation/{{Wildfire}}'' is about a young girl, Princess Sara, and her efforts to reclaim her rightful throne. The title refers to a magical talking horse who is sworn to protect her..
413[[/folder]]
414
415[[folder:Other]]
416* ''Buckley v. Valeo'', the 1976 US Supreme Court decision that struck down contribution and spending limits for political campaigns, was named for two relatively minor players in the court case. Then-New York Senator James Buckley was the main named plaintiff, but he was fronting a coalition of several other politicians and special interest groups. Francis Valeo, the defendant, was the secretary of the Senate at the time and his only connection to the case was his having been chosen as a figurative representative of the federal government for the purposes of the lawsuit.
417[[/folder]]

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