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Published: January 1, 2010 3:00 a.m.

Movies

Depp: Mad vision for his Hatter role

Rachel Abramowitz
Los Angeles Times
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Walt Disney Studios

Johnny Depp stars in “Alice in Wonderland,” in theaters March 5.

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HOLLYWOOD – When he takes on a role, Johnny Depp often paints a watercolor portrait of the still-forming character to help find his face and personality. After putting the finishing touches on the painting for “Alice in Wonderland,” Depp looked at the Mad Hatter staring back at him from the canvas and giggled.

“I was thinking,” Depp said, “ ‘Oh my God, this one will get me fired!’ ”

It’s hard to imagine any pink slips in the future for Depp, one of the biggest movie stars in the world.

But his version of the Mad Hatter for Tim Burton’s interpretation of “Alice in Wonderland” has stirred interest and, early on, skepticism from literary purists who say it’s a far cry from the character as described in Lewis Carroll’s 19th-century writings or from images in the public imagination shaped by years of stage productions and the 1951 Walt Disney animated classic.

Depp’s extreme vision for the character – who arrives in theaters March 5 – creates yet another vivid screen persona for the Hollywood chameleon who has played Sweeney Todd, Willie Wonka, Edward Scissorhands and a certain scoundrel named Jack Sparrow.

The actor, 46, said his Hatter’s springy mass of tangerine hair became an important detail because of one of the suspected origins of the term “Mad as a hatter.”

In the 18th and 19th centuries, mercury was used in the manufacture of felt, and when used in hats it could be absorbed through the skin and affect the mind through Korsakoff’s syndrome. Hatters and mill workers often fell victim to mercury poisoning which, in Carroll’s time, had an orange tint – hence Depp’s interest in adding brushstrokes of that watercolor to his portrait.

“I think (the Mad Hatter) was poisoned – very, very poisoned,” Depp said. “And I think it just took effect in all his nerves. It was coming out through his hair and through his fingernails, through his eyes.”

Depp’s research also took him down some unexpected literary rabbit holes with the writings of Carroll.

“There’s a great line in the book where the Hatter says, ‘I’m investigating things that begin with the letter M,” Depp said. “So I started kind of doing a little researching, reading a bunch. And you start thinking about the letter M and Hatters and the term ‘Mad as a hatter’ and ‘mercury.’ ”

Depp also was intrigued by one of the Mad Hatter’s nonsense questions during a dizzying tea party: “Why is a raven like a writing desk?”

“I think he is referencing Edgar Allan Poe,” Depp said, referring to the haunted author of “The Raven,” published in 1845. Depp let the two ideas germinate in his head and it informed his own Hatter concoction.