John Christopher Depp II

John Christopher Depp II net worth is $650 Million. Also know about John Christopher Depp II bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship and more …

John Christopher Depp II Wiki Biography

John Christopher Depp II well known as Johnny Depp currently has net worth which is estimated to be over $650 million dollars. Johnny earned his net worth while working as an actor, film producer and musician. He is the owner the Golden Globe Award and Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Actor. John Christopher Depp II was born on June 9, 1963 in Owensboro, Kentucky, U.S. Johnny Depp put a first significant lump into his net worth while starring in police procedural crime drama television series ’21 Jump Street’ created by Patrick Hasburgh and Stephen J. Cannell, earning a large teen fan base. His first major role on the big screen was in a horror slasher film directed by Wes Craven ‘A Nightmare on Elm Street’.

In 1990 Depp increased his net worth starring together with Winona Ryder in romantic dark fantasy film directed by Tim Burton and Denise Di Novi ‘Edward Scissorhands’ which has brought him a nomination of Golden Globe Award for Best Actor. Later, he created outstanding characters in crime drama ‘Donnie Brasco’ directed by Mike Newell, western ‘Dead Man’ written and directed by Jim Jarmusch, dark comedy film ‘Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas’ co-written and directed by Terry Gilliam and other films. In 1999, ‘Sleepy Hollow’ a horror film directed by Tim Burton where Johnny was co-starring with Christina Ricci was loved by public and added up to Johnny net worth. Films featuring Johnny Depp were financially magnificent as ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ a series of fantasy adventure films produced by Jerry Bruckheimer has grossed $3.72 billion worldwide, ‘Alice in Wonderland’ a fantasy film directed by Tim Burton and written by Linda Woolverton grossed 1 billion dollars, ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’ directed by Tim Burton grossed 474 million dollars, ‘The Tourist’ romantic comedy thriller co-written and directed by Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck, co-starring with Angelina Jolie box office grossed 278 million dollars. The very last roles also increased Johnny Depp net worth, he landed the Barnabas Collins role in horror comedy film based on the gothic soap opera of the same name ‘Dark Shadows’ directed by Tim Burton, Tonto role in ‘The Lone Ranger’ an action western film produced by Walt Disney Pictures and Jerry Bruckheimer Films and directed by Gore Verbinski, Dr. Will Caster role in ‘Transcendence’ a science fiction film directed by cinematographer Wally Pfister. Depp also raised his net worth not only while starring in films but also producing them. He produced ‘The Rum Diary’, ‘Hugo’ in 2011, ‘Dark Shadows’ in 2012 and ‘The Lone Ranger’ in 2013.

Johnny Depp married Lori Anne Allison in 1983. After a few years they divorced. He was engaged to actress Jennifer Grey, later to another actress Sherilyn Fenn. In 1990 he was dating Winona Ryder. In 1998 he had relationship with supermodel Kate Moss. After that, he had relationship with actress and singer Vanessa Paradis. Together with Vanessa they have two children. Despite this, they separated in 2012. Since then, Depp is dating actress and model Amber Heard.

IMDB Wikipedia $650 Million 157 lbs (71 kg) 1963 21 Jump Street (1987-1991) 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m) Actor Actors Alice in Wonderland Alice in Wonderland (2010) Amber Heard Amber Heard (m. 2015) American American film directors Angelina Jolie Betty Sue Palmer Charlie and the Chocolate Factory Cherokee Christi Dembrowski Christina Ricci Cinema of the United States Colonel Daniel Depp Dark Shadows Dark Shadows: Extras Dead Man (1995) Denise Di Novi Edward Scissorhands Film Film director Film producer Finding Neverland (2004) Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck German American Golden Globe Award Gore Verbinski Henry D. Perry Middle School Hugo Irish American J. Depp Jack John Christopher Depp III Jennifer Grey Jerry Bruckheimer Jim Jarmusch John Christopher “Johnny” Depp II John Christopher Depp John Christopher Depp II Johnny Johnny Depp Johnny Depp Net Worth June 9 Kate Moss Kentucky Lily-Rose Melody Depp Linda Woolverton Lori Anne Allison Lori Anne Allison (m. 1983–1985) Mike Newell Miramar High School Mr. Stench Musician Oprah Noodlemantra Owensboro Patrick Hasburgh Pirates of the Caribbean Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Restaurateur Screen Actors Guild Award Screenwriter Sherilyn Fenn Stephen J. Cannell Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007) Terry Gilliam The Rum Diary The Rum Diary (2011) The Tourist The Tourist (2010) Tim Burton United States United States of America Vanessa Paradis Vanessa Paradis (1998–2012) Voice Actor Wally Pfister Wes Craven Winemaker Winona Ryder Yoga Hosers

John Christopher Depp II Quick Info

Full Name Johnny Depp
Net Worth $650 Million
Date Of Birth June 9, 1963
Place Of Birth Owensboro, Kentucky, United States
Height 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
Weight 157 lbs (71 kg)
Profession Actor, Film Producer, Musician, Film director, Screenwriter, Voice Actor, Restaurateur, Winemaker
Education Henry D. Perry Middle School, Miramar High School
Nationality American
Spouse Amber Heard (m. 2015- 2017), Lori Anne Allison (m. 1983–1985)
Children Lily-Rose Melody Depp, Jack John Christopher Depp III
Parents John Christopher Depp, Betty Sue Palmer
Siblings Daniel Depp, Christi Dembrowski, Christi Dembrowski
Partner Vanessa Paradis (1998–2012)
Nicknames John Christopher Depp II , Mr. Stench , Colonel , Oprah Noodlemantra , Johnny , John Christopher “Johnny” Depp II , J. Depp , John Christopher Depp
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/johnnydepp.off/
Twitter https://twitter.com/realdepp?lang=en
Instagram https://www.instagram.com/explore/tags/johnnydepp/?hl=en
IMDB http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000136
Allmusic www.allmusic.com/artist/johnny-depp-mn0000247383
Awards Golden Globe Award (2008), MTV Movie Award for Best Villain (2008), MTV Generation Award (2012), People’s Choice Awards, Satellite Award, Teen Choice Awards, Empire Award for Best Actor
Music Groups Hello, Little Girl, A Little Priest, No Place Like London, Hollywood Vampires, Rock City Angels, The Hollywood Vampires, P, The New Basement Tapes, King Kobra, Montrose, Mean Street Machine, Legends Never Die, Ready Willing and Able
Nominations Academy Award for Best Actor, Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture – Drama, Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture, BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role, MTV Movie Award for Best On-Screen Duo, Critics’ Choice Movie Award for Bes…
Movies Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003), Finding Neverland (2004), Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007), Screen Actors Guild Award, Alice in Wonderland (2010), The Rum Diary (2011), The Tourist (2010), Dead Man (1995)
TV Shows 21 Jump Street (1987-1991), Dark Shadows: Extras

John Christopher Depp II Trademarks

  1. Never watches his own movies
  2. Known for wearing outlandish clothing and numerous tattoos
  3. Dark, intense eyes and highly defined cheekbones
  4. Frequently plays British characters: Sleepy Hollow (1999), From Hell (2001), the “Pirates of the Caribbean” films, Dark Shadows (2012), etc.
  5. Often stars alongside Helena Bonham Carter
  6. Frequently works with director Tim Burton
  7. Frequently plays freakishly eccentric outcasts whose oddities are misunderstood by society, and usually have a flamboyant appearance and mannerism. Examples: Edward Scissorhands (1990), Ed Wood (1994), Don Juan DeMarco (1994), Dead Man (1995), Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998), Sleepy Hollow (1999), Before Night Falls (2000), the “Pirates of the Caribbean” films and Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007).
  8. Deep, whispering voice

John Christopher Depp II Quotes

  • If Donald Trump is elected President of the United States, in a kind of historical way it’s exciting because we will see the actual last President of the United States.
  • [on Wes Craven casting him in A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)] Wes Craven was the guy who gave me my start, from my perspective, for almost no reason in particular. I read scenes with his daughter when I auditioned for the part. At the time, I was a musician. I wasn’t really acting. It was not anything very near to my brain or my heart, which is how it pretty much remains to this day. But Wes Craven was brave enough to give me the gig based on his daughter’s opinion. I guess she had read with a bunch of actors, and after the casting sessions, she said, “No, that’s the guy.” I always think of her for putting me in this mess, and certainly Wes Craven for being brave enough to give me this gig. But he was a good man – so rest in peace, old Wes.
  • [on considering the role of fatherhood] Let’s face it: practising for it is fun and it’s all wonderful. Man, I’d make a hundred!
  • The choices I made when I was in a position where it was do-or-die were made with my heroes in mind. I didn’t want to disappoint the people who had busted down doors before.
  • I love the idea of changing my look. I think one owes it to the audience, to go out there and give them something different each time, so as not to bore them to death.
  • I still approach a scene as one would approach a guitar solo. You don’t exactly know how you’re going to phrase this or that. Which I think is beautiful. That idea of chance.
  • There are those who meet their heroes and go, “Aw, fuck.” And I’ve never had that, luckily. I was never disappointed by the people I’ve admired.
  • I’ve always enjoyed hiding behind these characters. I could stand up in front of, it doesn’t matter how many people, as a character. But if I had to do it as myself and give a speech, I would be liquid.
  • I like that, each time, before I even go in front of the cameras, the studio’s reaction will be fear.
  • When you add up the amount of dialogue that you say per year and you realize that you’ve said written words more than you’ve had a chance to say your own words, you start thinking about that as an insane option for a human being.
  • [ on playing Tonto in ‘The Lone Ranger’] In the history of cinema, the Native Americans have been portrayed as the savage and something less than that. We thought at least we should take a shot at erasing that. We all approached it that way.
  • I’ve always admired actors who can try their hand at anything and, more often than not, succeed at it… people like Daniel Day-Lewis and Gary Oldman are just inspiring to watch.
  • If you love two people at the same time, choose the second. Because if you really loved the first one, you wouldn’t have fallen for the second
  • [on playing Barnabas in Dark Shadows (1966)] We decided a vampire should look like a vampire. It was our rebellion against vampires who look like underwear models. So, yeah, there was a bit of Nosferatu.
  • [on Hunter S. Thompson] The beauty with Hunter was that there was a very profound element of trust between us. The one side that sticks out to me about [him] is the side that not a lot of people recognized or had the opportunity to see, which was that he was a southern gentleman.
  • [on performing with Penelope Cruz] Having done the film ‘Blow’ together 10 or 11 years ago, something like that – the weird thing when we saw each other again was that we felt like we’d wrapped ‘Blow’ like the week before. It just clicked instantly, so whatever exists in terms of chemistry was just firing instantly on all cylinders. It felt completely right.
  • [on a scene involving a flight through the streets of London] It was horrible. It was gruelling. I’ve done many things in my life under the influence of – life – but I’d never actually thought of straddling two carriages while they’re moving and then of jumping on people’s heads and then onto another sort of cart. And then the thing catches fire. And this is how daddy brings home the bacon.
  • [on what he hopes for in his future career] Smooth sailing with no big ups, no big downs. Just full steam ahead. {Maybe a geriatric Jack?] Yeah, I think they could wheel me in. Interestingly enough, with a character like Captain Jack, you just feel you could continue. The possibilities are endless, limitless. There’s any possibility of madness and absurdity that could commence. With this character you feel that you’re never really done.
  • [1995] I think the stuff I do could be accepted by the wide movie going audience if the audience weren’t programmed to think in certain ways…but maybe we’d be better off if there were more films around that made you think, made you have to use your own brain to figure things out. That’s why people don’t read any more. They don’t chew their own food. They just want to swallow it, get it fucking down then move on. [When asked if it bugs him that the Studios’ sell films as ‘What’s Eating Gilbert Grape (1993)’ as “small and “special”]
  • [1995] You can never, ever understand fully what a woman’s life might be like until you step into her shoes. The same thing goes for transvestites. [Talking about his role in ‘Ed Wood (1994)’]
  • (Joking about Ryan Reynolds taking over the title “Sexiest Man Alive 2010”) I feel emasculated.I feel like I’ve been beaten down like some horrible … you know, like some pathetic harp seal. But, I mean, that’s how it goes, isn’t it?I think I can work my way forward, but will I try for it again? No. … I worked so hard to gain that title.
  • (On first seeing himself on-screen) I got sick. I went to see dailies on Nightmare on Elm Street. I was 21, and didn’t know what was going on. It was like looking in a huge mirror. It wasn’t how I looked that bothered me, though I did look like a geek in that movie. It was seeing myself up there pretending.
  • (1996 – On fame) If there’s anything I really want, it’s privacy. You do get to where your money can help your family, and that’s a great thing. You can buy that wristwatch you want, too. But mostly you now have to pay for simplicity. You use your money to buy privacy because during most of your life you aren’t allowed to be normal. You’re on display, always looked at, which puts you at a disadvantage for the people looking at you know that it’s you. They say, “It’s you!” But you don’t know them. That’s bad for an actor because the most important thing you can do is observe people. And now you can’t because you’re the one being observed.
  • (On growing up) We moved like gypsies. From the time I was five until my teens we lived in 30 or 40 different houses. That probably has a lot to do with my transient life now. But it’s how I was raised so I thought there was nothing abnormal about it. Wherever the family is, that’s home. We lived in apartments, on a farm, in a motel. Then we rented a house, and one night we moved from there to the house next door. I remember carrying my clothes across the yard and thinking, This is weird, but it’s an easy move.
  • I pray on airplanes. I get instant religion during takeoff, then when we’re safely in the air I sit there thinking about the fact that any little thing that goes wrong could send us crashing to the ground.
  • I’m not sure I could give up pork. Steak, OK. Maybe hamburgers. But nothing in the world can make me stop eating swine. I mean, I had a great-grandmother, Mimmy, who ate the greasiest food you ever saw and chewed tobacco till the day she died, and she lived to be 102.
  • I have a really soft spot for blondes. I find myself attracted to blonde women the most.
  • [on Elizabeth Taylor] The best old-school dame I’ve ever met. A regular, wonderful person.
  • [on buying a private island] Money doesn’t buy you happiness, but it buys you a big enough yacht to sail right up to it.
  • (about his high school) I was around 15 when I left. I went back 2 weeks later, thinking “You know what, this is crazy, I should go back.” So I went back, and I talked to the dean of the school, and he said, “Johnny… we don’t *want* you to come back.” He said, it was really sweet actually, “You have this music thing, I think you should run with it. That’s your passion, you should go with it.” So I did.
  • (About teen magazines) Those are things that are out of my control. It’s very nice to be appreciated, but I’m not really comfortable with it. I’ve never liked being the centre of attention. It comes with the territory.
  • It’s scary. It’s terrifying. People come up to you and start crying. Everybody compares everyone to James Dean these days. If you’re lucky they mention Brando [Marlon Brando] or De Niro [Robert De Niro]. They invite you to put on an instant image.
  • I’ve gotten weird letters, suicide letters, girls threatening to jump if I don’t get in touch with them. So you think, This is bullshit, but then you think, What if it’s not? Who wants to take that chance? I write them back, tell them to hang in there – if things are that bad they have to get better. But I’m not altogether stable myself, so who am I to give advice?
  • Kids write to me and say they are having these problems or they want to commit suicide or something. It’s scary. I have to say, Listen, I’m just an actor, not a professional psychologist. If you need help, you should go and get it.
  • (About 21 Jump Street) I’m afraid I started navel-gazing. I started thinking like, There are 365 days in a year, but for 275 of those days, I’m saying someone else’s words. And they’re bad words. And I only get to say my own for 90 days.
  • Now it’s starting to get to profound [things]. She sat me down the other day, sort of like, “Dad, I need to have a talk with you.” You know, she’s four. I said, “Alright sweetheart, what do you got?” She said, “I just want to ask you three questions.” I said, “Ok, what do you got?” She said, “Is God afraid of dogs?” I thought about it. I said, “No honey, I don’t think he is. Probably not.” She said, “Ok. Has He seen the dinosaurs?” I said, “Yes, I think he has.” And then she said, “Does God have a maid?” And I didn’t know how to answer it!
  • When I see someone who just follows their dream and succeeds, and just does basically what they want to do and doesn’t have to answer to anyone, obviously not harming anyone, that’s great.
  • (About 21 Jump Street) I got a call from my agents, who said, “These people want you to come and read for this TV thing.” And I said, “No, no, no, no, no”. I didn’t want to sign some big contract that would bind me for years. So they hired somebody else to do it, and they fired him after about a month, and then they called me again and said, “Would you please come in and do it?” My agent said, “The average span of a TV series is thirteen episodes, if that. One season.” So I said OK.
  • (About his character in 21 Jump Street) Hanson is not someone I’d want to have pizza with. I don’t believe in having undercover cops in high school – it’s spying. The only thing I have in common with Tom Hanson is that we look alike.
  • (About Peter DeLuise, friend from 21 Jump Street) If Peter wasn’t on the show I would have gone insane or jumped into the river. He’s my savior.
  • (About teen magazines) They had come to me in the beginning and said, “We want you to do these interviews and stuff for these magazines,” and I said, “What magazines?” And they said, “Sixteen! Teen Beat! Teen Dream! Teen Poop! Teen Piss! Teen Shit!”
  • [on the difficulties of his singing in Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007)] The one [song] that was probably the most challenging was “Johanna [Act II]”… And as far as I was concerned, when Stephen Sondheim writes the note and it has to be held for this many beats, you do it. I don’t care if you’re from Miramar or Kentucky or you’re an ass and you don’t sing. It doesn’t matter. Don’t be a pussy, you fucking hold that note. You can’t cheat. You can’t whisper. You can’t do the William Shatner thing. You just gotta belt it out. So I really beat myself up, making sure I could hold those notes. In “Johanna,” some are, like, twelve beats. That was a bugger. At one point, I was very close to passing out– I got dizzy and saw black. But that’s what Sondheim wrote, so that’s what you do.
  • I made some shitty movies when I was first starting out, but I’m not embarrassed by them, especially as I didn’t think I was going to be an actor – I was just trying to make some money. I was still a musician. When I first started out I was just given the opportunity, and there was no other way to make that kind of money. Apart from crime. I couldn’t believe how much they were paying me.
  • (About Platoon) I went to read for Oliver Stone, and Oliver scared the shit out of me! I read for him and he said, “OK, I need you for ten weeks in the jungle.” It was a great experience.
  • (About his early relationship) I don’t regret any of them. I had a good time. Most of what’s been written about me has been completely false. People have created an image that has absolutely nothing to do with me, and they have the power to sell it, to shove it down the throats of people. I’m an old-fashioned guy who wants marriage and kids.
  • I like to think that I’m very considerate of other people’s feelings, and I was trained as a small child to always try my best at everything. I think I’m a mixture of romantic and realist. I’m a realist about some stuff, but I also wholeheartedly believe that in a society where people get divorced every five minutes you can still stay married for 50 or 75 years. It’s been done and it’s beautiful. When I see a couple celebrating their 75th wedding anniversary, I just think that it’s totally incredible.
  • [about The Kids in Hollywood] It was horrible. There were so many bands it was impossible to make any money. So we all got side jobs. We used to sell ads over the telephone. Telemarketing. We got $100 a week. We had to rip people off. We’d tell them they’d been chosen by so-and-so in their area to receive a grandfather clock. They would order $500 worth of these fucking things and we would send them a cheap grandfather clock. It was horrible.
  • [about his job of selling pens over the phone] I was working a day job selling ink pens over the phone and getting maybe $100 a week, but I thought, “What have I got to lose?”
  • [about his career as a salesman] The last couple of times I did it, I just said, “Listen, you don’t want this stuff, man”.
  • [about A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)] I was just not what [director Wes Craven] had written for the story. He had written the part of a big, blond, beach jock, football player guy. And I was sort of emaciated, with old hairspray and spiky hair, earrings, a little catacomb dweller. Then five hours later that agent called me and said, “You’re an actor”.
  • [about a scene in A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)] I love this stuff. The kid falls asleep and it’s all over, he’s sucked right into the bed and spit out as blood. His bloody body rises straight out and then topples over, too. I heard somebody talk about having a dummy shot out of the bed, but I said, “Hey, I want to do this! It’ll be fun! Lemme do it!”
  • You know, I was married, when I was 20. It was a strong bond with someone, but I can’t necessarily say I was in love. That’s something that comes around once, man, maybe twice if you’re lucky. And I don’t know that I experienced that, let’s say, before I turned 30.
  • [about his first marriage] I guess I have very traditional kinds of sensibilities about that kind of stuff – you know, a man and a woman sharing their life together and having a baby, whatever – and I think for a while I was trying to right the wrongs of my parents because they split up when I was a kid, so I thought I could do it differently – make things work. I had the right intentions, but the wrong timing – and the wrong person. But I don’t regret it; I had fun and I learned a lot.
  • I can remember my parents fighting and us kids wondering who was going to go with whom if they got divorced.
  • I remember carving my initials on my arm and I’ve scarred myself from time to time since then. In a way your body is a journal and the scars are sort of entries in it.
  • These are the most important people in my life. You know, I would die for these people. If someone were to harm my family or a friend or somebody I love – I would eat them. I might end up in jail for 500 years – but I would eat them.
  • My father left and my mother was deeply hurt and sick physically and emotionally. That’s a very traumatic thing for a family to go through, so we all pulled together and did the best we could.
  • I played rock’n’roll clubs in Florida. I was underage, but they would let me come in the back door to play, and then I’d have to leave after the first set. That’s how I made a living, at about $25 a night. At times we could make $2,100 – we used to make that for the entire group and the road crew, which is a lot.
  • I started smoking at 12, lost my virginity at 13 and did every kind of drug there was by 14. Pretty much any drug you can name, I’ve done it. I wouldn’t say I was bad or malicious, I was just curious. I certainly had my little experiences with drugs. Eventually, you see where that’s headed and you get out.
  • [about one of his old teachers asking for an autograph] I mean, what was I supposed to say? He’d failed me. I remember one time this teacher yelled at me so heavily in front of the entire class. He didn’t have any time for me then, and now, all of a sudden, he wants my autograph? They all thought I was going to end up a drug addict, in jail.
  • I hung around with bad crowds. We used to break and enter places. We’d break into the school and destroy a room or something. I used to steal things from stores.
  • I’d been in high school three years, and I may have just walked in yesterday. I had, like, eight credits. I was in my third year of high school and I didn’t want to be there. I was bored out of my mind and I hated it.
  • At first we’d wear T-shirts that said “Flame” on them. At 13 I was wearing plain T-shirts. Then I used to steal my mom’s clothing. She had all these crushed velvet shirts with French-cut sleeves. And, like, seersucker bell bottoms. I dreamed of having platforms, but couldn’t find any.
  • [about living in the small town of Miramar as a kid] Miramar was like Endora, the town in What’s Eating Gilbert Grape (1993). It had two identical grocery stores opposite each other and nothing much ever happened there.
  • My cousins had a gospel group and they came down and played gospel songs, and that was the first time I ever saw an electric guitar. I got obsessed with the electric guitar, so my Mom bought me one from them for $25. I was about twelve years old. Then I locked myself in a room for a year and taught myself how to play, learned off records, and then I started playing in little garage bands. The first group I was ever in was called Flame. Then I was in The Kids. They were the ones who moved to Hollywood.
  • I was a weird kid. I wanted to be Bruce Lee. I wanted to be on a SWAT team. When I was five, I think I wanted to be Daniel Boone.
  • (about his mother, Betty Sue) Years and years I watched her wait tables. I’d count her change at the end of the night. She cursed like a sailor, played cards and smoked cigarettes.
  • [about Edward D. Wood Jr.] Like him I also grew up feeling like an obtuse piece of machinery. It was the same feeling I had about Edward Scissorhands.”
  • I’ve been around long enough to know that one week, you’re on the exclusive list of guys who can open a movie, and then the next week, you’re off the list. It’s been a fun ride, and I’m enjoying it for all it’s worth.
  • I had never experienced that before. And it’s been fun to visit Hollywood and talk to studios as a bankable actor for a change.
  • [about Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003)] I only wanted to be in a movie that my kids could see.
  • All the amazing people that I’ve worked with – Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, Dustin Hoffman – have told me consistently: don’t compromise. Do your work, and if what you’re giving is not what they want, you have to be prepared to walk away.
  • There’s a drive in me that won’t allow me to do certain things that are easy. I can weigh all the options, but there’s always one thing that goes: “Johnny, this is the one.” And it’s always the most difficult – it’s always the one that will cause the most trouble.
  • I love our house in the country. I can walk to the nearby village and have a coffee and no one pays any notice. I’m just another dad with my daughter on my knee. The time I’ve spent in France with [girlfriend Vanessa Paradis] has solidified my belief that I can keep a major distance from Hollywood and still keep in the game. Acting is my living, but I don’t want to live it. Living in France is the first time I can honestly say I feel at home.
  • [about girlfriend Vanessa Paradis] I pretty much fell in love with Vanessa the moment I set eyes on her. As a person, I was pretty much a lost cause at that time in my life. She turned all that around for me with her incredible tenderness and understanding.
  • [about Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003)] It was mentioned that they were considering a movie based on the Pirates of the Caribbean ride, and I said I was in. There was no screenplay, no director, nothing. For some unknown reason, I just said I was in.
  • (on preparing to sing as Sweeney Todd] It’s a bit like jumping into cold water. There’s no preparing, you just do it.
  • [on director Tim Burton] What more can I say about him? He is a brother, a friend, my godson’s father. He is a unique and brave soul, someone that I would go to the ends of the earth for, and I know, full and well, he would do the same for me.
  • What I said was, the United States of America is a young country compared to Europe, compared to, you know, other countries. We’re young. We’re 200 and something years old.
  • I loved playing Edward Scissorhands (1990) because there’s nothing cynical, jaded or impure about him. It’s almost a letdown to look in the mirror and realize I’m not Edward.
  • Having kids was a huge change for me. Becoming a father. But I think more than changing, I feel like I’ve been revealed to myself, I kind of found out who I was. When you meet your child for the first time and you’re looking at this angel, you start realizing what an idiot you’ve been for so many years and how much time you’ve wasted. As far as being feet-on-the-ground, once again my kids and [‘girlfriend Vanessa Paradis] have given me a proper foundation. A sense of home that I never had in my life, a real sense of a place to be.
  • [Marlon Brando] wanted me to escape movies for a while – “Take a year off. Go on. Study Shakespeare”. So it’s one of the things that keep ricocheting around in my head. He told me that by the time he had got to the point where he felt he could do “Hamlet”, it was too late. So he said, “Do it now, do it while you can”. And I would like to do it – although it’s one of the more frightening ideas I’ve had. I think as an actor it is good to feel the fear of failing miserably. I think you should take that risk. Fear is a necessary ingredient in everything I do. But if I do “Hamlet” it will probably be in a small theater on a small stage and it will have to be very, very soon because I’m getting a little long in the tooth for it.
  • [asked by Rolling Stone if there was a “gay undercurrent” in his character Capt. Jack Sparrow in the “Pirates of the Caribbean’ films] Well, there was a great book I read . . . What was it called? “Sodomy and the Pirate Tradition”. A very interesting book. I wasn’t exactly going for that with the character. And Keith is not flamboyant in his actions. Keith is pretty stealth. But with Jack, it was more that I liked the idea of being ambiguous, of taking this character and making everything a little bit . . . questionable. Because women were thought to be bad luck on ships. And these pirates would go out for years at a time. So, you know, there is a possibility that one thing might lead to another.
  • As a teenager I was so insecure. I was the type of guy that never fitted in because he never dared to choose. I was convinced I had absolutely no talent at all. For nothing. And that thought took away all my ambition, too.
  • There’s nothing – you know – nothing else like music. Nothing that touches us on that, uh, that deep level. Music can open up so many emotions that we didn’t know we had. It’s the magical thing about musicals, you know, on the stage or on film or whatever. Love songs. They work so well because music touches us, emotionally, where words alone can’t.
  • Marlon Brando is maybe the greatest actor of the last two centuries. But his mind is much more important than the acting thing. The way that he looks at things, doesn’t judge things, the way that he assesses things. He’s as important as, uh… who’s important today? Jesus, not many people… Stephen Hawking!
  • [on being an uncle] My sister Christi had a baby when I was 17, and I had just heard about crib death. The horrible thing was that it wasn’t understood. For some unknown reason the baby would stop breathing. So I would sneak into where the baby was sleeping and put my hand in her crib, hold her little finger, and I’d sleep on the floor like that. It was stupid, I’m sure. But I thought the warmth of my hand might help, that maybe if she felt my pulse it would remind her to breathe.
  • I don’t have a mental picture of the houses we lived in because there were so many.
  • I started out as a guitarist in the early ’80s. I hooked up with a guy who idolized James Dean and he gave me a copy of the Dean biography, “The Mutant King”, which I thought was really interesting. While reading the book I watched Rebel Without a Cause (1955), and I thought, “Wow, this guy really has something”, and I was hooked. I wasn’t really into acting at the time – but James Dean was the catalyst.
  • [on reactions to his directorial debut] You know what was traumatizing, what was very, very strange in terms of this film I directed a few years back called The Brave (1997). Well, I guess I wouldn’t say traumatizing, but I would say weird: at the premiere of the film the reception of it was beyond any expectation that I had. I had no idea I’d be looking at [Bernardo Bertolucci] or [Michelangelo Antonioni] sitting there watching my film. And then to receive the applause that my film got, it was so incredible. And then the next day the majority of the American press just turn it into this horrible thing. Once again, everybody is entitled to their opinion, man. Maybe it’s a bad film? Maybe it’s a good film? To me it’s just a film. It’s something I needed to make.
  • [on director Tim Burton] He can ask me everything. If he wants me to have sex with an aardvark in one of his next movies, then I will do that.
  • [on his daughter, Lily-Rose] I see this amazing, beautiful, pure angel-thing wake up in the morning, and nothing can touch that. She is the only reason to wake up in the morning, the only reason to take a breath. Everything else is checkers.
  • [on Gene Wilder’s comment on the remake of Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971)] Hearing about that was disappointing, but I can understand where he’s coming from, I guess. The one thing I didn’t understand was that apparently he was quoted as saying, “Well, they just did this for money”. Well, hey, man, where have you been? When didn’t they ever do anything for money? Nobody’s ever made a film in the history of cinema where they weren’t expecting some return on their dough.
  • We had been shooting [Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005)] for about a month, and I was beginning to get nervous because there weren’t any phone calls. I called my agent and asked, “Has no one called from the studio to complain or say, ‘Hey, what’s he doing?’ or ‘Hey, he’s freaking us out?’ ” And when she said, “No”, I thought, “Christ, I’m not doing enough! Something’s wrong!” Then some of the studio brass came over to the set, and they were sitting in my trailer and I was all decked out as Wonka with the little bangs. And I just had to know. So I said, “Okay, who was the first one, when you started seeing the dailies, that got a little worried?” And there was this beautiful 30-second silence. And [Warner Bros. president] Alan Horn finally said, “Yeah, that was me”. I felt better instantly.
  • [asked why he hides his looks behind strange wigs, fake teeth and girly squeals] I think it’s an actor’s responsibility to change every time. Not only for himself and the people he’s working with, but for the audience. If you just go out and deliver the same dish every time . . . it’s meat loaf again . . . you’d get bored. I’d get bored.
  • All the little films I’ve done that were perceived by Hollywood as these obscure, weird things, I always thought could appeal to a larger audience. I mean, box office is such a mystery to me that I can’t . . . you know . . . I have enough trouble doing my own gig.
  • I suppose nowadays it’s all a question of surgery, isn’t it? Of course the notion is beautiful, the idea of staying a boy and a child forever, and I think you can. I have known plenty of people who, in their later years, had the energy of children and the kind of curiosity and fascination with things like little children. I think we can keep that, and I think it’s important to keep that part of staying young. But I also think it’s great fun growing old.
  • If you turn on the television and see the horrors that are happening to people in the world right now, I think there’s no better time to strive to have some kind of hope through imagination. I think it’s a time to close your eyes and try to make a change, or at least hope to make a change, or we’re going to explode.
  • On a film you start to get closer and closer with the people you’re working with, and it becomes like this circus act or this travelling family.
  • The term “serious actor” is kind of an oxymoron, isn’t it? [Like] “Republican party” “airplane food”.
  • Sure, I find it touching, honestly, but awards are not as important to me as when I meet a ten-year-old kid who says, “I love Captain Jack Sparrow” . . . that’s real magic for me.
  • The character I’ve played, that I’ve responded to, there has been a lost-soul quality to them.
  • This is a rumor-filled society and if people want to sit around and talk about whom I’ve dated, then I’d say they have a lot of spare time and should consider other topics… or masturbation.
  • When kids hit one year old, it’s like hanging out with a miniature drunk. You have to hold onto them. They bump into things. They laugh and cry. They urinate. They vomit.
  • I’m shy, paranoid, whatever word you want to use. I hate fame. I’ve done everything I can to avoid it.
  • [about being dragged behind a carriage in the woods on Sleepy Hollow (1999)] I wasn’t afraid of getting hurt. I was just afraid that the horses may relieve themselves on the journey.
  • [asked if he is a romantic] Am I a romantic? I’ve seen Wuthering Heights (1939) ten times. I’m a romantic.
  • [when asked by James Lipton on Inside the Actors Studio (1994) what attracts him to funny hats] I don’t know, maybe I just read too much Dr. Seuss as a kid.
  • I’m an old-fashioned guy . . . I want to be an old man with a beer belly sitting on a porch, looking at a lake or something.
  • The only gossip I’m interested in is things from the Weekly World News ‘Woman’s bra bursts, 11 injured.’ That kind of thing.
  • With any part you play, there is a certain amount of yourself in it. There has to be, otherwise it’s just not acting. It’s lying.
  • I can remember when I finished Edward Scissorhands (1990), looking in the mirror as the girl was doing my make-up for the last time and thinking — it was like the 90th or 89th day of shooting — and I remember looking and going, “Wow, this is it. I’m saying goodbye to this guy, I’m saying goodbye to Edward Scissorhands”. You know, it was kind of sad. But in fact, I think they’re all still somehow in there.
  • [on his character in Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003)] Captain Jack Sparrow is like a cross between Keith Richards and Pepe Le Pew.
  • France and the whole of Europe have a great culture and an amazing history. Most important thing, though, is that people there know how to live! In America they’ve forgotten all about it. I’m afraid that the American culture is a disaster.
  • Taken in context, what I was saying was that, compared to Europe, America is a very young country and we are still growing as a nation. It is a shame that the metaphor I used was taken so radically out of context and slung about irresponsibly by the news media. There was no anti-American sentiment. In fact, it was just the opposite. I am an American. I love my country and have great hopes for it. It is for this reason that I speak candidly and sometimes critically about it. I have benefited greatly from the freedom that exists in my country and for this I am eternally grateful.
  • America is dumb. It’s like a dumb puppy that has big teeth that can bite and hurt you, aggressive. My daughter is four, my boy is one. I’d like them to see America as a toy, a broken toy. Investigate it a little, check it out, get this feeling and then get out.
  • One of the greatest things I’ve ever seen happen was the morning I opened the newspaper and it said that some very powerful government officials had decided to change the name of “french fries” to “freedoom fries” and “french toast” to “freedom toast”. It was impressive. I wanted to write a letter to them just to thank them, just for proving globally that they were absolute imbeciles.
  • The only creatures that are evolved enough to convey pure love are dogs and infants.
  • [on Vincent Price] One of the most incredible moments I’ve ever had was sitting in Vincent’s trailer . . . I was showing him this first-edition book I have of the complete works of [Edgar Allan Poe], with really amazing illustrations. Vincent was going nuts over the drawings, and he started talking about The Tomb of Ligeia (1964). Then he closed the book and began to recite it to me in this beautiful voice, filling the room with huge sounds. Such passion! I looked in the book later, and it was verbatim. Word perfect. It was a great moment. I’ll never forget that.
  • I don’t pretend to be captain weird. I just do what I do.
  • [on the money he makes] You use your money to buy privacy because during most of your life you aren’t allowed to be normal.
  • Anything I’ve done up till 27 May, 1999 was kind of an illusion, existing without living. My daughter, the birth of my daughter, gave me life.

John Christopher Depp II Important Facts

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  • $45,000 per episode
  • The judge had denied Depp’s request to impose a $100,000 sanction on Heard for allegedly delaying the divorce proceeding.
  • A big fan of Buster Keaton, having a large collection of his films , Director Tod Browning, Cab Calloway and fats Waller.
  • Amber Heard filed for divorce from Johnny Depp on 25th May, 2016. The following day, Heard was granted a domestic violence restraining order against Depp in relation to a physical altercation between the couple, which resulted in Heard filing for divorce in the first place. Heard was granted $7 million as part of the former couple’s divorce, all of which she donated to charity.
  • On May 24 2016, Johnny as part of the band Hollywood Vampires, embarked on their first concert tour across Europe.
  • In 2015 Johnny Depp, Aerosmith guitarist Joe Perry and Alice Cooper formed the band Hollywood Vampires. The name of the band was derived from “The Hollywood Vampires”, a celebrity drinking club that was formed in the 1970s by Alice Cooper and included members such as Ringo Starr of The Beatles and Keith Moon of The Who.
  • In 2015 Johnny, as part of the rock group Hollywood Vampires, released an album, “Hollywood Vampires”, with fellow band members Joe Perry and Alice Cooper. The album featured guest appearances by Dave Grohl, Paul McCartney and Christopher Lee.
  • Good friends with: Christina Ricci, Helena Bonham Carter, Abigail Breslin, Freddie Highmore, Orlando Bloom and Robert Downey Jr..
  • Black Mass (2015) is his favorite of his own films.
  • He was considered for the role of Charles Chaplin in Chaplin (1992) before Robert Downey Jr. was cast.
  • Namechecked in the opening lines of the song “Mermaid” by US band Train (2012): “Can’t swim so I took a boat / To an island so remote / Only Johnny Depp has ever been to it before”.
  • He has made six films with Christopher Lee: Sleepy Hollow (1999), Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005), Corpse Bride (2005), Alice in Wonderland (2010), Hugo (2011) and Dark Shadows (2012).
  • He has made six films with Helena Bonham Carter: Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005), Corpse Bride (2005), Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007), Alice in Wonderland (2010), Dark Shadows (2012) and The Lone Ranger (2013).
  • He was rumored to star in Doctor Strange (2016).
  • As of 2014, has appeared in three films that were nominated for the Best Picture Oscar: Platoon (1986), Chocolate (2000) and Finding Neverland (2004). Of those, Platoon won in the category.
  • Is good friends with Marilyn Manson, owns the prosthetic breasts Manson wore on the cover of his 1998 album Mechanical Animals, and also played guitar on Marilyn Manson’s 2012 cover of Carly Simon’s “You’re so vain”.
  • Depp owns a vineyard in Plan-de-la-Tour, France.
  • Depp once left a $4,000 tip for a dinner at a Chicago restaurant.
  • Depp has said that he wears two silver skull rings to remind him that life is short and every moment needs to be lived to the fullest.
  • It took Depp two years to learn how to play the guitar.
  • Suffers from near-sightedness since birth, and is nearly blind in his left eye. He claims that the condition cannot be corrected by surgery.
  • Engaged to Amber Heard [January 17, 2014].
  • Working with the Entertainment Industry Foundation, the Montblanc and the National Arts Initiative to give children more access to the Arts. [November 2004]
  • He was going to star in a Howard Hughes biopic written and directed by the Hughes Brothers that never got made.
  • He turned down the role of Lestat in Interview with the Vampire: The Vampire Chronicles (1994).
  • He was James O’Barr’s preferred choice to star in The Crow (1994).
  • He was Disney’s first choice to star in The Rocketeer (1991).
  • He turned down the role of Jack Dawson in Titanic (1997).
  • He was considered for JD in Thelma & Louise (1991).
  • He turned down the role of Sam Wheat in Ghost (1990) in favour of Edward Scissorhands (1990).
  • He auditioned for the lead role in Near Dark (1987) that went to Adrian Pasdar.
  • He turned down the lead role in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986). He has no regrets about missing out on this one.
  • According to Bob Gale, he auditioned for Marty McFly in Back to the Future (1985). “I looked through the notes, and I said, ‘Geez, I don’t even remember that we read Johnny Depp!’ So whatever he did, it wasn’t all that memorable, I guess!”.
  • Became a father for the 2nd time at age 38 when his [now ex] partner Vanessa Paradis gave birth to their son John Christopher “Jack” Depp II on April 9, 2002.
  • Became a father for the 1st time at age 35 when his [now ex] partner Vanessa Paradis gave birth to their daughter Lily-Rose Depp on May 27, 1999.
  • Ranked #13 on Empire Online list of the 100 Sexiest Movie Stars in 2013.
  • Hasn’t yet met his fan, actress Tippi Hedren, even though she named one of her house cats after him. He did act with her son-in-law, Antonio Banderas, in Once Upon a Time in Mexico (2003) and had a cameo in the feature film version of 21 Jump Street (2012), which featured her granddaughter, Dakota Johnson, in a supporting role.
  • June 2012 won the MTV Generation Award.
  • Has amicably separated from Vanessa Paradis, his girlfriend of fourteen years. [June 2012]
  • His performance as Captain Jack Sparrow in Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) was ranked at #79 by Premiere Magazine’s 100 Greatest Performances of All Time.
  • Depp was honored with a life-size statue in Serbia (2010). The statue was unveiled to him by his friend, Serbian director Emir Kusturica.
  • Johnny Depp was interested in playing “Arturo Bandini” in the movie, Ask the Dust (2006), back in 1993 but they couldn’t get financing on it. It was later made and released in 2006 with Colin Farrell playing “Arturo”.
  • As of 2011, his favorite characters played are Jack Sparrow, Edward Scissorhands and Ed Wood.
  • Appeared on the cover of GQ magazine three times: October ’93, August ’03 and February ’10.
  • Is the only actor to appear in 3 of the 10 films to gross $1 billion with Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006), Alice in Wonderland (2010) and Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides (2011).
  • While dining at Chicago’s famous Gibsons Bar and Steakhouse with a group of friends, including Public Enemies (2009) co-star Marion Cotillard and director Michael Mann, Depp dropped a mammoth tip in the amount of $4,000 on a bill for $4,400, in effect, leaving an incredible 90% gratuity. The party of 15 were celebrating a red carpet screening of Depp’s then latest release Public Enemies (2009). [June 2009]
  • Was present during the filming of then-girlfriend Sherilyn Fenn’s movie The Wraith (1986) and was living in the film crew’s hotel with Fenn. [1986]
  • At the 2010 People’s Choice Awards, he won the award for Favorite Movie Actor of the Decade. Depp was honored by Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007) co-star Sacha Baron Cohen.
  • Nominated for Grammy award along with Douglas Brinkley in the category of Best Album Notes for Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson Music from the Film. [2010]
  • Attended the Küstendorf Film and Music Festival in Serbia. [January 2010]
  • Received the prestigious Career Achievement Award at 2009. Bahamas International Film Festival (BIFF). Festival Patron Sean Connery presented Depp with his award.
  • People Magazine’s “Sexiest Man Alive” in 2009.
  • Is a fan of Doctor Who (1963) and Downton Abbey (2010).
  • Close friend of Abigail Breslin.
  • Was considered for the role of Pumpkin/Ringo in Pulp Fiction (1994), but Tim Roth was cast instead.
  • Named beaches on his own island in Bahamas after his once-girlfriend Vanessa Paradis, his children and public figures like Hunter S. Thompson and Marlon Brando. There is also a patch of water named “Heath’s Place” after Heath Ledger.
  • Turned down the role of Bruce Banner in Hulk (2003).
  • Based his characterization of Edward D. Wood Jr. on a mixture of “the blind optimism of Ronald Reagan, the enthusiasm of “The Tin Man” from The Wizard of Oz (1939) and Casey Kasem”.
  • Was considered one of the top three actors of his generation by Dustin Hoffman, his co-star in Finding Neverland (2004).
  • Is scared of clowns (coulrophobia), spiders (arachnophobia), and ghosts (phasmophobia).
  • Was considered for the role of Detective Trupo in American Gangster (2007).
  • Was considered for the role of Cal McCaffery in State of Play (2009) after Brad Pitt dropped out. The role went to Russell Crowe instead.
  • Donated his fee earned for The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus (2009) to the daughter of late Heath Ledger. Jude Law and Colin Farrell did the same thing after Depp gave that idea.
  • Has expressed interest in getting French, British or Australian citizenship when he retires from an active movie career.
  • Was originally going to play opposite the English comedian Sally Phillips in The Man Who Killed Don Quixote, which Terry Gilliam was going to direct, but the movie got scrapped.
  • Is a fan of the popular British series Midsomer Murders (1997). He also stated that he would like to make a guest appearance in this long-running show.
  • Ranked #6 in the 2008 Forbes The Celebrity 100 list.
  • Nicolas Cage got him his first acting job.
  • Closed down the “Viper Room” for two weeks after River Phoenix died there and he also closed it on every 31 October until 2004 (when he sold his share of the club), which was the date of Phoenix’s death.
  • He and Vanessa Paradis grow grapes and have wine making facilities in their vineyard in Plan-de-la-Tour north of Saint-Tropez.
  • Was originally supposed to play the on screen version of Billy Loomis in the original version of Scream 2 (1997), but was replaced by Luke Wilson.
  • Co-wrote the song “Mary” by the hard rock band Rock City Angels.
  • Made a voice message for seventeen-year-old British girl who has been in a coma for five months. Parents of the girl asked him to tape a voice message because he’s the favorite actor of their daughter and they will play that message to her every day hoping she’ll wake up. Depp was touched by the letter and he said that he’ll do whatever he can to help. [March 2008]
  • Is good friends with actress Helena Bonham Carter, partner of his best friend Tim Burton.
  • Was originally set to play the lead character Jean-Dominique Bauby in Julian Schnabel’s movie The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (2007). However, he dropped from the project due to scheduling conflicts.
  • Had a nightclub named after him in Tartu, Estonia. The nightclub was called “Who wouldn’t like Johnny Depp?”.
  • Guest with Jim Jarmusch of Belgrade Film Festival FEST in 1992. With Jarmusch, Emir Kusturica and Serbian rock ‘n’ roll band Partybreakers (Partibrejkersi) he held a concert.
  • Good friend of Serbian film director Emir Kusturica.
  • Was a fan of the British improvisational show “Whose Line Is It Anyway?”.
  • Donated $2 million to the Great Ormond Street Hospital in London. He gave the gift as thanks for the treatment his daughter Lily-Rose received at the facility in March 2007 after contracting an E. Coli infection that caused kidney failure.
  • Is a godfather of Tim Burton’s son Billy Ray Burton.
  • Was named Top Money Making Star for the second year in a row in the 76th annual Quigley Publishing Co. poll for year 2007.
  • In 2007, it was reported by Forbes Magazine that his earnings for the year 2006 were estimated to be $92 million.
  • Was named Empire Magazine’s #5 in the list of 100 Sexiest Stars.
  • 2007 – Ranked #21 on EW’s The 50 Smartest People in Hollywood.
  • Turned down the role of Jack Traven in action blockbuster Speed (1994).
  • Is a fan of The Rolling Stones and the gypsy musical group Taraf de Haidouks.
  • Was engaged to Sherilyn Fenn, whom he met on the set of the 1985 short student film “Dummies” directed by Laurie Frank. Their engagement was broken off after three years and a half.
  • His children have the same names as “Mad” Jack and Lilly the Mermaid from the movie Magic Island (1995).
  • Is a great admirer and good friend of Tom Baker.
  • Originally cast as John Smith in Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005), but turned it down after being overworked with other movies he was shooting.
  • Has two silver teeth.
  • Owns a customised 1960’s 650cc Triumph Bonneville motorcycle.
  • Was considered for the role of Florentino Ariza in Love in the Time of Cholera (2007), but director Mike Newell refused to work with big name Hollywood stars. Javier Bardem got the role instead.
  • Named after his father, John Christopher Depp.
  • Has admitted in interviews that one of his favorite pastimes is watching cartoons (especially Dave the Barbarian (2004), of whom he is a big fan) with his children.
  • He is the youngest of four children.
  • Born in Kentucky but moved to Florida at age 7.
  • He was good friends with Hunter S. Thompson until his death. Depp helped to fulfill Thompson’s last wish after the writer died. Thompson wanted his remains to be shot out of a 150 foot long canon.
  • As of 2014, has appeared in eight films directed by Tim Burton: Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007), Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005), Corpse Bride (2005), Sleepy Hollow (1999), Ed Wood (1994), and Edward Scissorhands (1990), Alice in Wonderland (2010), Dark Shadows (2012).
  • Once painted on a billboard featuring his 21 Jump Street (1987) character because he didn’t like his picture or the message the billboard gave. He was stopped by a security guard who actually let him finish what he was doing when he realized it was Johnny’s own face.
  • Has been described as the “jester of cinema, the Method clown.” His incredibly bizarre on-screen persona brings to mind the off-screen behavior of the late Marlon Brando, who was famously eccentric and quirky once he retired from acting.
  • He missed out on several roles that went to Keanu Reeves. He was considered for Johnny Utah in Point Break (1991); he was Francis Ford Coppola’s original choice for Johnathan Harker in Dracula (1992), but the studio wanted a heartthrob; he turned down the role of Jack Traven in Speed (1994); and he was the Wachowskis’ choice for Neo in The Matrix (1999), but the studio didn’t think he was a big enough name.
  • Oliver Stone seriously considered casting him in Charlie Sheen’s role in Platoon (1986), but the studio thought Depp was “too young.” Sheen is actually two years younger than Depp!
  • Frequently cites Captain Jack Sparrow (Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003)) and Edward Scissorhands (1990) as the favorite characters that he has played.
  • Is the second actor to be nominated for the Oscar in the Lead Actor category in a Disney film (Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003)). The first was Richard Farnsworth for The Straight Story (1999).
  • A rule he has towards fans requesting his autograph and picture is that no photography is allowed of his children.
  • Ranked #18 on Premiere’s 2006 “Power 50” list. Had ranked #23 in 2005.
  • His performance as Edward Scissorhands in Edward Scissorhands (1990) is ranked #65 on Premiere Magazine’s 100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time.
  • His performance as Captain Jack Sparrow in Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) is ranked #87 on Premiere Magazine’s 100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time (2006).
  • Was close with his grandfather who died when he was seven years old.
  • Ranked #1 in the “Best Hollywood Signers 2006” list by “Autograph Collector” magazine (May 2006).
  • He turned down the lead role in Oz the Great and Powerful (2013) in favour of The Lone Ranger (2013).
  • His performance as Captain Jack Sparrow in Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) is ranked #79 on Premiere Magazine’s 100 Greatest Performances of All Time (2006).
  • His performance as Edward Scissorhands in Edward Scissorhands (1990) is ranked #22 on Premiere Magazine’s 100 Greatest Performances of All Time (2006).
  • Was voted the Second Greatest Actor (behind Marlon Brando) in British Channel Channel 4’s Greatest Actor Poll.
  • His ownership of the Viper room ended in 2004 when he signed it over to Amanda Fox, the daughter of his missing partner in the club, Anthony Fox.
  • Was listed as a potential nominee on the 2006 Razzie Award nominating ballot. He was suggested in the Worst Actor category for his performance in the film Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005), however, he failed to receive a nomination.
  • Johnny’s family has lived in Kentucky for many generations, and many of his antecedents have lived in the United States, in general, since the 1600s. His ancestry includes English, as well as Irish, Scots-Irish, Scottish, Welsh, French, Dutch, Belgian (Flemish), and German. Also, in 2013, researchers for Ancestry.com established that Johnny has remote African ancestry; they traced his lineage back to Elizabeth Key, a biracial woman, born c. 1630, who was the first woman of African ancestry to successfully sue to emancipate herself from slavery in the North American colonies (she emancipated her son, as well). Johnny has frequently stated that he believes that he has Cherokee, or other recent Native American, ancestry, although this ancestry has never been verified by genealogists. Asked the origin of his last name by James Lipton on Inside the Actors Studio, Depp stated, perhaps jokingly, that his name means “idiot” in German.
  • Sherilyn Fenn’s name is scrawled across his helmet in Platoon (1986).
  • Has portrayed a real-life character in ten films: Edward D. Wood Jr. in Ed Wood (1994), Lt. Victor/Bon Bon in Before Night Falls (2000), Hunter S. Thompson in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998), Insp. Fred Abberline in From Hell (2001), Joseph D. Pistone/Donnie Brasco in Donnie Brasco (1997), George Jung in Blow (2001), J.M. Barrie in Finding Neverland (2004), ‘John Wilmot, The Second Earl of Rochester’ in The Libertine (2005), Jack Kerouac in The Source: The Story of the Beats and the Beat Generation (1999), and John Dillinger in Public Enemies (2009).
  • Although unable to attend, he was awarded the Gary Cooper Spirit of Montana Award at the 2005 HatcH audiovisual festival in Bozeman, Montana. HatcH honored Depp for his outstanding career and his role as a mentor and inspiration to young and aspiring artists.
  • Great admirer of Marlon Brando. He was also good friends with the legendary actor, who described Depp as one of the greatest actors of his generation.
  • Had come into professional contact with the great screen villains Vincent Price and Christopher Lee. Price co-starred with Depp in Edward Scissorhands (1990), and Lee co-starred with him in Sleepy Hollow (1999), Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005) and Corpse Bride (2005). Oddly, all of them were Tim Burton films.
  • He also played slide for an acoustic recording of Fade Away, recorded in 1995 for the War Child: Help album.
  • Learned French to be able to converse with Vanessa Paradis’ parents.
  • In 2004, Renée Zellweger accepted the Screen Actors Guild Award for “Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role” on his behalf, because he wasn’t present at the awards ceremony
  • As a child, he was allergic to chocolate.
  • As a teen, he and his punk rock/New Wave band “The Kids” opened for Iggy Pop, Duran Duran, and The B-52’s, among others.
  • Dropped out of high school at age 16 to pursue a career as a musician.
  • Apparently conceived his portrayal of Edward D. Wood Jr. as a cross between Ronald Reagan (the wobbly-headed thing), the Tin Man from The Wizard of Oz (1939), and the voice of Casey Kasem.
  • When he was cast as “Willy Wonka” in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005), many newspapers published headings about “Depp’s Willy” and “Deppy’s Willy is a Bit Wonkier”.
  • Premiere Magazine ranked him as #47 on a list of the Greatest Movie Stars of All Time in their Stars in Our Constellation feature (2005).
  • Co-owns a restaurant/club in Paris called Man Ray (named after avant-garde artist Man Ray) with Sean Penn and John Malkovich. The restaurant is located in a renovated theater and serves Tibetan cuisine.
  • Loves watching animated films with his daughter such as Shrek (2001) and Finding Nemo (2003).
  • A movie buff with a somewhat encyclopedic knowledge of older films, he admits he watches few movies anymore, other than the children’s films that his “kiddies” prefer. He also enjoys most of them.
  • Has something in common with actor Robert Englund, famed for portraying dream-stalking Freddy Krueger in the “Nightmare on Elm Street” movies. Both of them appeared in the first A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984), and both had played characters with blades for hands: Englund as Freddy Krueger, and Depp as the title character in Edward Scissorhands (1990). And, strangely, both of them were born in June, with their birthdays three days apart, and they share the same height, which is 5′ 10″.
  • Ranked #4 in TV Guide’s list of TV’s 25 Greatest Teen Idols (23 January 2005 issue).
  • Is hugely interested in Jack the Ripper. He starred in From Hell (2001), which was about Jolly Jack.
  • Sports his son’s nickname, Jack, tattooed on his arm and a beaded bracelet made by his daughter Lily Rose.
  • Purchased Bela Lugosi’s Los Angeles home.
  • Based the character of Captain Jack Sparrow on rock legend Keith Richards and the Looney Tunes character, Pepe Le Pew.
  • Was ranked #5 on VH1’s 100 Hottest Hotties.
  • Has a niece, Megan; she works for popular online entertainment magazine TYCP.
  • Received a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7018 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California on November 19, 1999. Tim Burton and Martin Landau were guest speakers.
  • Persuaded actor Rey-Phillip Santos to give acting a try.
  • Has been in seven films in which the title contains the name of the character he plays: Edward Scissorhands (1990), Cry-Baby (1990), What’s Eating Gilbert Grape (1993), Ed Wood (1994), Don Juan DeMarco (1994), Donnie Brasco (1997) and Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007).
  • Reportedly based his portrayal of “Ichabod Crane” in Sleepy Hollow (1999) on “Withnail” from Withnail & I (1987), as played by Richard E. Grant.
  • Shot all of his scenes in nine days for Once Upon a Time in Mexico (2003), but after his filming was done he didn’t want to leave. So he suggested to Robert Rodriguez that he play a small part, the priest that Antonio Banderas talks to in the church, and use his Marlon Brando impression.
  • According to the liner notes for the soundtrack CD of Once Upon a Time in Mexico (2003), he wrote his own theme music, the music for Sands (Track 9 on the CD).
  • Chosen as E!’s 2003 Entertainer of the Year.
  • The building in which Depp’s Viper Room is housed was once owned by infamous gangster Bugsy Siegel.
  • Was People Magazine’s Sexiest Man Alive in 2003.
  • Siblings: Danny (D.P. Depp), Christi Dembrowski, and Deborah (Debbie).
  • Resides in France, Los Angeles, and an island he owns in the Bahamas. Divides his time in France between Meudon, a suburb of Paris and a villa in Plan-de-la-Tour, an hour outside of St Tropez in Southern France.
  • He wanted some of his teeth to be gold-capped for Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) but thought the producers would never agree. He found a dentist and had lots more capped than he wanted. Disney boss Michael Eisner like them but thought there were way too many and told Depp to remove all but a few.
  • Parents: John Christopher Depp and Elizabeth “Betty” Sue Wells. His parents divorced when he was 15.
  • Has a song about him by the late famed schizophrenic Chicago street artist Wesley Willis.
  • Gave Noel Gallagher a white guitar with the letter “P” on it, which he regularly plays during Oasis’ gigs. “P” is the name of a band that Depp was in.
  • Johnny’s two children with Vanessa Paradis have the same names of the two main characters in Legend (1985): Lily (b. 1999) and Jack (b.2002).
  • Wrote the foreword to Mark Salisbury’s biography of Tim Burton, “Burton on Burton.” He credits Burton’s belief in him for rescuing him from being “a loser, an outcast, just another piece of expendable Hollywood meat.”
  • Was named one of the 50 Most Beautiful People by People Magazine in 2001.
  • Lists British comedy The Fast Show (1994) — renamed “Brilliant” for American television — as his favorite television program of all time. He used to take tapes of the series on tour with him to keep him amused. Made a guest appearance in the last-ever sketch in its last-ever episode.
  • With Chuck E. Weiss, Depp reportedly paid US $350,000 for the Central Nightclub in Los Angeles, California, and turned it into the Viper Room at 8852 Sunset Blvd. Other stars in contention to buy the club in 1993 included Arnold Schwarzenegger and, separately, Frank Stallone.
  • Chosen #2 on E!’s 25 sexiest entertainers list
  • Named one of E!’s Top 20 Entertainers of 2001.
  • Got his “Betty Sue” tattoo May 31, 1988.
  • Adopted Goldeneye, the one-eyed Andalusian horse who played Gunpowder, Ichabod Crane’s steed in Sleepy Hollow (1999), thereby saving him from the glue factory.
  • Was the guitarist in a band called The Kids and currently plays in a band called P.
  • When engaged to Winona Ryder, he had “Winona forever” tattooed on his arm. After the broke up, he had the n and a surgically removed to simply say “Wino forever!”
  • Ex-fiancées: Sherilyn Fenn, Kate Moss, Jennifer Grey, and Winona Ryder.
  • Arrested for trashing a New York hotel room. Depp claimed that an armadillo was responsible, saying that he had found the animal hidden in a closet and it had gone crazy, wrecking the hotel room before leaping out the window. [1994]
  • Has twice recorded with British band Oasis. Most notably, he plays lead slide guitar on the track “Fade In-Out”, from the 1997 album Be Here Now. Noel Gallagher, Oasis’s lead guitarist, was allegedly too drunk to perform it himself, so celebrity pal Depp stepped in and nailed the lead on one take.
  • Voted Empire’s (UK) Sexiest Male Movie Star of All Time. [1995]
  • Chosen by People (USA) Magazine as one of the 50 Most Beautiful People in the World. [1996]
  • Ranked #67 in Empire (UK) magazine’s The Top-100 Movie Stars of All Time list. [October 1997]
  • Arrested for being in a fight with paparazzis in front of a restaurant in London. [January 1999]
  • Chosen by Empire magazine as one of the “100 Sexiest Stars in Film History” (#1). [1995]

John Christopher Depp II Filmography

Title Year Status Character Role
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them 2 2018 pre-production Gellert Grindelwald Actor
Sherlock Gnomes 2018 filming Sherlock Gnomes (voice) Actor
Murder on the Orient Express 2017 post-production Ratchett Actor
LAbyrinth 2017 post-production Russell Poole Actor
London Fields 2017 completed Chick Purchase (uncredited) Actor
The Invisible Man announced Dr. Griffin Actor
The Libertine announced Actor
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales 2017 Captain Jack Sparrow Actor
The Black Ghiandola 2017 Short Nuclear Med Tech Actor
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them 2016 Grindelwald Actor
Alice Through the Looking Glass 2016 Hatter Tarrant Hightopp Actor
Donald Trump’s The Art of the Deal: The Movie 2016 TV Movie Donald J. Trump Actor
Yoga Hosers 2016 Guy Lapointe Actor
Black Mass 2015 James ‘Whitey’ Bulger Actor
Mortdecai 2015 Mortdecai Actor
Into the Woods 2014 Wolf Actor
Tusk 2014 Guy Lapointe (as Guy Lapointe) Actor
Transcendence 2014/I Will Caster Actor
Lucky Them 2013 Matthew Smith Actor
The Lone Ranger 2013 Tonto Actor
Family Guy 2012 TV Series Edward Scissorhands Actor
Paul McCartney: My Valentine 2012 Video short Johnny Depp Actor
Dark Shadows 2012 Barnabas Collins Actor
21 Jump Street 2012 Officer Tom Hanson (uncredited) Actor
Life’s Too Short 2011 TV Series Johnny Depp Actor
Jack and Jill 2011/I Johnny Depp (uncredited) Actor
The Rum Diary 2011 Kemp Actor
Lego Pirates of the Caribbean: The Video Game 2011 Video Game Jack Sparrow (voice) Actor
Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides 2011 Jack Sparrow Actor
Rango 2011 Rango
Lars (voice)
Actor
The Tourist 2010 Frank Tupelo Actor
Alice in Wonderland 2010/I Mad Hatter Actor
Public Enemies 2009 John Dillinger Actor
The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus 2009 Imaginarium Tony 1 Actor
SpongeBob SquarePants 2009 TV Series Jack Kahuna Laguna Actor
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street 2007 Sweeney Todd Actor
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End 2007 Jack Sparrow Actor
Bloopers of the Caribbean 2006 Video short Jack Sparrow (uncredited) Actor
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest 2006 Jack Sparrow Actor
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Legend of Jack Sparrow 2006 Video Game Jack Sparrow (voice) Actor
Corpse Bride 2005 Victor Van Dort (voice) Actor
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory 2005 Willy Wonka Actor
The Libertine 2004 Rochester Actor
Finding Neverland 2004 Sir James Matthew Barrie Actor
Ils se marièrent et eurent beaucoup d’enfants 2004 L’inconnu Actor
King of the Hill 2004 TV Series Yogi Victor Actor
Secret Window 2004 Mort Rainey Actor
Blooper Reel 2003 Video short Jack Sparrow (uncredited) Actor
Once Upon a Time in Mexico 2003 Sands Actor
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl 2003 Jack Sparrow Actor
From Hell 2001 Inspector Frederick Abberline Actor
Blow 2001 George Jung Actor
The Fast Show 2000 TV Series Customer in suit store Actor
Chocolat 2000 Roux Actor
Before Night Falls 2000 Bon Bon
Lieutenant Victor
Actor
The Man Who Cried 2000 Cesar Actor
Sleepy Hollow 1999 Ichabod Crane Actor
The Astronaut’s Wife 1999 Commander Spencer Armacost Actor
The Ninth Gate 1999 Dean Corso Actor
The Vicar of Dibley 1999 TV Series Johnny Depp Actor
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas 1998 Raoul Duke Actor
The Brave 1997 Raphael Actor
Donnie Brasco 1997 Donnie Actor
Nick of Time 1995 Gene Watson Actor
Dead Man 1995 William Blake Actor
Don Juan DeMarco 1994 Don Juan DeMarco Actor
Ed Wood 1994 Ed Wood Actor
What’s Eating Gilbert Grape 1993 Gilbert Grape Actor
Benny & Joon 1993 Sam Actor
Arizona Dream 1993 Axel Blackmar Actor
Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare 1991 Guy on TV (as Oprah Noodlemantra) Actor
Edward Scissorhands 1990 Edward Scissorhands Actor
21 Jump Street 1987-1990 TV Series Officer Tom Hanson Actor
Cry-Baby 1990 Cry-Baby Actor
R.P.G. II 1988 Short Vince Dooler Actor
Hotel 1987 TV Series Rob Cameron Actor
Platoon 1986 Lerner Actor
Slow Burn 1986 TV Movie Donnie Fleischer Actor
R.P.G. 1986 Short Vinnie Dooler Actor
Lady Blue 1985 TV Series Lionel Viland Actor
Private Resort 1985 Jack Actor
Dummies 1985 Short Pete Actor
A Nightmare on Elm Street 1984 Glen Lantz Actor
Mortdecai 2015 producer Producer
LaDonna Harris: Indian 101 2014 Documentary executive producer Producer
The Lone Ranger 2013 executive producer Producer
Dark Shadows 2012 producer Producer
The Rum Diary 2011 producer Producer
Hugo 2011 producer Producer
Into the Woods 2014 performer: “Hello, Little Girl” Soundtrack
The Lone Ranger 2013 performer: “Contest” Soundtrack
2012 MTV Movie Awards 2012 TV Special performer: “Gold on the Ceiling”, “Lonely Boy” Soundtrack
Dark Shadows 2012 performer: “The Joker” Soundtrack
West of Memphis 2012 Documentary performer: “Little Lion Man”, “Damien Echols Death Row Letter Year 16 [Score]” Soundtrack
The Rum Diary 2011 performer: “Kemp In The Village”, “The Mermaid Song Instrumental” / writer: “Kemp In The Village” Soundtrack
Nostalgia Critic 2010 TV Series performer – 1 episode Soundtrack
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street 2007 performer: “No Place Like London”, “My Friends”, “Pirelli’s Miracle Elixir”, “Pretty Women”, “Epiphany”, “A Little Priest”, “Johanna Act II”, “By The Sea”, “The Judge’s Return”, “Final Scene Part 1”, “Final Scene Part 2” Soundtrack
Once Upon a Time in Mexico 2003 producer: “Sands Theme” / writer: “Sands Theme” Soundtrack
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl 2003 performer: “Yo Ho A Pirate’s Life for Me” Soundtrack
Chocolat 2000 “Minor Swing/They’re Red Hot/Caravan” Soundtrack
Untitled Keith Richards Documentary 2016 Documentary Director
The Brave 1997 Director
Stuff 1993 TV Short as J. Depp Director
The Brave 1997 screenplay Writer
Lost Songs: The Basement Tapes Continued 2014 Documentary musician: Guitar Music Department
7 Days,7 Girls 2017 very special thanks completed Thanks
Captain Jokes Parrot’s Disaster of the Caribbean 2017 TV Movie grateful acknowledgment Thanks
That’s Life!! Kilorenzos Smith in Talks… 2013 TV Series documentary inspiration – 1 episode Thanks
Don’t Say No Until I Finish Talking: The Story of Richard D. Zanuck 2013 Documentary special thanks Thanks
Funny Show Part Two: The Video – Movie 2012 Video inspiration Thanks
On the Road 2012 thanks Thanks
Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory 2011 Documentary special thanks Thanks
Norte a sur: Una ruta, 5 experiencias 2010 TV Series dedicatee – 10 episodes Thanks
Before Breakfast 2010/I Short special thanks Thanks
The Rooneys 2010 TV Short special thanks Thanks
Stuntmen 2009 special thanks Thanks
Taste of Flesh 2008 Video very special thanks Thanks
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory 2005 Video Game extra special thanks Thanks
Lost in La Mancha 2002 Documentary special thanks Thanks
One Taste Is Never Enough… The Pleasures of ‘Chocolat’ 2000 TV Movie documentary special thanks Thanks
L.A. Without a Map 1998 special thanks Thanks
The 55th Annual Grammy Awards 2013 TV Special Himself – Presenter Self
For No Good Reason 2012 Documentary Himself Self
Close Up 2012 Documentary Himself Self
Arts in Context 2012 TV Series documentary Himself Self
CINEMAsuisse: Marc Forster 2012 Short Himself Self
Janela Indiscreta 2010-2012 TV Series Himself Self
Radioman 2012 Documentary Himself Self
Golden Gods Awards 2012 TV Special Himself Self
Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards 2012 2012 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Favorite Movie Actor / Voice from an Animated Movie Self
48 Hours: Hard Evidence 2012 TV Series Himself Self
Sunset Strip 2012 Documentary Himself Self
The 69th Annual Golden Globe Awards 2012 TV Special Himself – Presenter Self
Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides 35mm 3D Special 2011 TV Special Himself Self
20 heures le journal 1999-2011 TV Series Himself Self
Le grand journal de Canal+ 2011 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Johnny Vs. Geoffrey 2011 Video short Himself Self
Legends of on Stranger Tides 2011 Video documentary Himself Self
Attack of the Show! 2011 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Cinema 3 1994-2011 TV Series Himself Self
Breakfast 2011 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Festival international de Cannes 2010-2011 TV Series Himself Self
The Oprah Winfrey Show 2004-2011 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
True Crime with Aphrodite Jones 2011 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Unite for Japan 2011 Short Himself Self
Nickelodeon’s Kids Choice Awards 2011 2011 TV Special Himself Self
The Tourist: Action in Venice 2011 Video short Himself Self
The Tourist: A Gala Affair 2011 Video short Himself Self
The Tourist: Canal Chats 2011 Video short Himself Self
Tourist Destination: Travel the Canals of Venice 2011 Video short Himself Self
The 7PM Project 2010-2011 TV Series Himself Self
ES.TV HD 2011 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
CMT Insider 2011 TV Series Himself Self
The 68th Annual Golden Globe Awards 2011 TV Special Himself – Nominee Self
The 37th Annual People’s Choice Awards 2011 TV Special Himself – Winner: Favorite Movie Actor Self
Close Up 2011 TV Series Himself – Interviewee Self
In Search of Ted Demme 2010 Documentary Himself Self
Alice in Wonderland: Finding Alice 2010 Video documentary short Himself Self
Alice in Wonderland: The Mad Hatter 2010 Video documentary short Himself Self
Channel 4’s Comedy Gala 2010 TV Movie Himself Self
Go’ aften Danmark 2010 TV Series Himself Self
GMTV 2005-2010 TV Series Himself Self
Friday Night with Jonathan Ross 2010 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Xposé 2009-2010 TV Series Himself Self
The 36th Annual People’s Choice Awards 2010 TV Special Himself Self
Criminal Technology 2009 Video documentary short Himself Self
Larger Than Life Adversaries 2009 Video documentary short Himself Self
Michael Mann: Making ‘Public Enemies’ 2009 Video documentary short Himself Self
On Dillinger’s Trail 2009 Video documentary short Himself Self
Public Enemies: Blu-ray Historical Interactive Timeline 2009 Video documentary short Himself Self
Public Enemies: Blu-ray Picture in Picture 2009 Video documentary short Himself Self
The Last of the Legendary Outlaws 2009 Video documentary short Himself Self
Scream Awards 2009 2009 TV Special Himself Self
Punkt 12 2009 TV Series Himself Self
HBO First Look 2001-2009 TV Series documentary short Himself Self
20 to 1 2009 TV Series documentary Himself Self
The Doors: When You’re Strange 2009 Documentary Narrator (voice) Self
The 66th Annual Golden Globe Awards 2009 TV Special Himself – Presenter: Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Comedy or Musical Self
Marc Forster – Der Weg zu 007 2008 Documentary Himself Self
National Movie Awards 2008 TV Special Himself Self
2008 MTV Movie Awards 2008 TV Special Himself Self
This American Life 2008 TV Series documentary Self
Rock and a Hard Place: Another Night at the Agora 2008 Documentary Himself Self
The 80th Annual Academy Awards 2008 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Actor in a Leading Role Self
The South Bank Show 2008 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Film ’72 2004-2008 TV Series Himself Self
Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson 2008 Documentary Himself – Narrator Self
This Morning 2008 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Golden Globes Announcement Special 2008 TV Movie Himself Self
Extérieur jour 2008 TV Series Himself Self
Broadway Beat 2008 TV Series Himself Self
Keith and the Captain: On Set with Johnny and the Rock Legend 2007 Video documentary Himself Self
The Tale of the Many Jacks 2007 Video documentary Himself Self
Bloopers of the Caribbean 2007 Video short Himself / Jack Sparrow (uncredited) Self
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End Movie Special 2007 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
HypaSpace 2007 TV Series documentary Himself Self
A Journey Behind the Scenes of ‘Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End’ 2007 TV Short Himself Self
Good Morning America 1990-2007 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Brando 2007 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Joe Strummer: The Future Is Unwritten 2007 Documentary Himself Self
The 33rd Annual People’s Choice Awards 2007 TV Special documentary Himself (via satellite) Self
Taff 2006 TV Series Himself Self
According to Plan: The Making of ‘Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest’ 2006 Video documentary Himself Self
Captain Jack: From Head to Toe 2006 Video documentary Himself Self
Creating the Kraken 2006 Video documentary Himself Self
Dead Man Tell New Tales: Re-Imagineering the Attraction 2006 Video documentary Himself Self
Fly on the Set: The Bone Cage 2006 Video documentary Himself Self
Inside Dead Man’s Chest 2006 Video documentary Himself Self
Pirates on Location: Cannibal Island & Tortuga Bar Brawl 2006 Video documentary Himself Self
Buy the Ticket, Take the Ride: Hunter S. Thompson on Film 2006 Documentary Himself Self
Space Top 10 Countdown 2006 TV Series Himself Self
The Teen Choice Awards 2006 2006 TV Special Himself Self
Forbes Celebrity 100: Who Made Bank? 2006 TV Movie Himself Self
Pirates of the Caribbean: Secrets of Dead Man’s Chest 2006 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Capturing ‘The Libertine’ 2006 Video documentary short Himself Self
When the Road Bends… Tales of a Gypsy Caravan 2006 Documentary Himself Self
Deep Sea 2006 Documentary short Narration (voice) Self
Inside the Two Worlds of ‘The Corpse Bride’ 2006 Video documentary short Himself (voice, uncredited) Self
The 63rd Annual Golden Globe Awards 2006 TV Movie documentary Himself – Nominee: Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy Self
The 32nd Annual People’s Choice Awards 2006 TV Special documentary Himself (via satellite) Self
Johnny Cash: God’s Gonna Cut You Down 2006 Video short Himself Self
Making Puppets Tick 2006 Video short Himself Self
Tim Burton: Dark vs. Light 2006 Video short Himself Self
Voices from the Underworld 2006 Video short Himself Self
At the Movies 2005 TV Series Himself Self
Corazón de… 2005 TV Series Himself Self
Attack of the Squirrels! 2005 Video documentary short Willy Wonka Self
3rd Irish Film and Television Awards 2005 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
El Magacine 2005 TV Series Himself Self
Planet Voice 2005 TV Series Himself Self
Getaway 2005 TV Series Himself Self
Rove Live 2005 TV Series Himself Self
The Wonderful World of Roald Dahl 2005 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Ahora 2005 TV Series Himself Self
Becoming Oompa-Loompa 2005 Video documentary short Willy Wonka Self
10 Most Excellent Things: Charlie and the Chocolate Factory 2005 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno 1995-2005 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
It Came from… Baltimore!! 2005 Video documentary short Himself Self
Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards ’05 2005 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
‘Finding Neverland’: The Making of 2005 Video short Himself Self
Finding Neverland: On the Red Carpet 2005 Video short Himself Self
The Magic of ‘Finding Neverland’ 2005 Video short Himself Self
The 77th Annual Academy Awards 2005 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Actor in a Leading Role Self
Marc Forster – Von Davos nach Hollywood 2005 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
11th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards 2005 TV Special Himself – Nominee Self
The 62nd Annual Golden Globe Awards 2005 TV Special documentary Himself – Nominee: Best Actor in a Motion Picture [Drama] Self
Tsunami Aid: A Concert of Hope 2005 TV Special Himself Self
The 31st Annual People’s Choice Awards 2005 TV Special Himself Self
Happy Birthday, Peter Pan 2005 TV Special documentary Himself Self
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory: Designer Chocolate 2005 Video documentary short Himself Self
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory: Different Faces, Different Flavors 2005 Video documentary short Himself Self
E! True Hollywood Story 2005 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Just the Facts 2004 TV Movie documentary Himself – Actor Self
Phua Chu Kang 2004 TV Series Himself Self
Spirit of the Ride 2004 Video documentary Himself Self
The Lost Disc: Becoming Barbossa 2004 Video documentary Himself Self
The Lost Disc: Becoming Captain Jack 2004 Video documentary Himself Self
The Lost Disc: The Monkey’s Name Is Jack 2004 Video documentary Himself Self
The Buried Secret of M. Night Shyamalan 2004 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Secret Window: A Look Through It 2004 Video documentary short Himself Self
Secret Window: From Book to Film 2004 Video documentary short Himself Self
Comme au cinéma 2004 TV Series documentary Himself Self
2004 MTV Movie Awards 2004 TV Special Himself Self
Richard & Judy 2004 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
On-Air with Ryan Seacrest 2004 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The 76th Annual Academy Awards 2004 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Actor in a Leading Role Self
The 61st Annual Golden Globe Awards 2004 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy Self
The Anti-Hero’s Journey 2004 Video documentary short Himself / Sands Self
The Good, the Bad & the Bloody: Inside KNB EFX 2004 Video documentary short Himself / Sands Self
An Epic at Sea: The Making of ‘Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl’ 2003 Video documentary short Himself Self
Diary of a Pirate 2003 Video documentary short Himself Self
God kveld Norge 2003 TV Series Himself Self
Charlie: The Life and Art of Charles Chaplin 2003 Documentary Himself – Actor Self
4Pop 2003 TV Series documentary Himself Self
The Brendan Leonard Show 2003 TV Series Himself Self
Breakfast with Hunter 2003 Documentary Himself Self
20/20 2003 TV Series documentary Himself – Actor (segment “Johnny Depp: The Ultimate Outsider”) Self
Hunter Goes to Hollywood 2003 Video documentary short Himself Self
Cartaz Cultural 2003 TV Series Himself (2008) Self
Bravo Profiles 2003 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Diary of a Producer 2003 Video short Himself Self
Secrets of Superstar Fitness 2002 TV Series Himself Self
Inside the Actors Studio 2002 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
All the Love You Cannes! 2002 Documentary Himself Self
Jack the Ripper: 6 Degrees of Separation 2002 Video documentary Himself Self
Star Boulevard 2002 TV Series documentary short Himself Self
The 2002 World Music Awards 2002 TV Special Himself Self
Lost in La Mancha 2002 Documentary Himself Self
A Tour of the Inferno: Revisiting ‘Platoon’ 2001 Video documentary Himself Self
A View from Hell 2001 TV Short documentary Himself Self
+ de cinéma 2001 TV Series documentary short Himself Self
In Bad Taste 2000 TV Special documentary Himself Self
Sleepy Hollow: Behind the Legend 2000 Video documentary short Himself Self
The Rosie O’Donnell Show 1997-2000 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Lowell Blues: The Words of Jack Kerouac 2000 Documentary short Reader Self
Mundo VIP 2000 TV Series Himself Self
One Taste Is Never Enough… The Pleasures of ‘Chocolat’ 2000 TV Movie documentary Himself / Roux Self
The Stars of ‘Star Wars’: Interviews from the Cast 1999 Video documentary Himself Self
Top Secret 1999 TV Series documentary Himself – Narrator Self
1999 MTV Video Music Awards 1999 TV Special Himself – Presenter Self
Comic Relief: The Record Breaker 1999 TV Special Himself Self
La nuit des Césars 1999 TV Series documentary Himself – César d’honneur Self
The Source: The Story of the Beats and the Beat Generation 1999 Documentary Jack Kerouac Self
Spotlight on Location: Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas 1998 Video documentary short Himself Self
L.A. Without a Map 1998 Himself / William Blake (uncredited) Self
Where It’s At: The Rolling Stone State of the Union 1998 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The Making of ‘Donnie Brasco’ 1997 Video short Himself Self
Town Meeting with Diane Sawyer: Celebrities vs. the Press 1997 TV Special documentary Himself Self
Cannes Man 1997 Himself Self
Ciné6 1997 TV Series Himself Self
Gran premio internazionale della TV 1997 TV Series Himself – Winner Self
Sinatra: 80 Years My Way 1995 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Showbiz Today 1995 TV Series Himself Self
Help! War Child 1995 TV Movie Himself Self
The Smokin’ Mojo Filters: Come Together 1995 Video short Himself Self
Maury 1995 TV Series Himself Self
United States of Poetry 1995 TV Mini-Series documentary Himself Self
The 52nd Annual Golden Globe Awards 1995 TV Special Himself – Nominee Self
Troldspejlet 1994 TV Series Himself / Gilbert Grape Self
The 66th Annual Academy Awards 1994 TV Special Himself – Presenter: Song ‘Philadelphia’ Self
Hey Hey It’s Saturday 1994 TV Series Himself Self
CBS This Morning 1993 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Idols 1991 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The 48th Annual Golden Globe Awards 1991 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Comedy / Musical Self
In the Director’s Chair: The Man Who Invented Edward Scissorhands 1990 TV Movie Himself Self
The Making of ‘Cry Baby’ 1990 Documentary short Cry Baby Self
The 1990 Annual ShoWest Awards 1990 TV Special Himself – Winner: Male Star of Tomorrow Self
The 41st Annual Primetime Emmy Awards 1989 TV Special Himself Self
Classic Rock Awards 2017 TV Special documentary Himself Self
Extra 2016-2017 TV Series Himself Self
Entertainment Tonight 2007-2017 TV Series Himself / Himself – Into the Woods Self
Ok! TV 2016-2017 TV Series Himself Self
The Insider 2014-2017 TV Series Himself / Himself – Into the Woods Self
Ellen: The Ellen DeGeneres Show 2012-2017 TV Series Himself – Guest / Himself Self
Jimmy Kimmel Live! 2012-2017 TV Series Himself – Guest / Himself Self
David Blaine: Beyond Magic 2016 TV Movie Himself Self
Hope and Healing Award Concert 2016 Himself Self
Access Hollywood 2016 TV Series Himself Self
The Graham Norton Show 2011-2016 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
Black Mass: Deepest Cover, Darkest Crime 2016 Video documentary short Himself Self
Johnny Depp: Becoming Whitey Bulger 2016 Video documentary short Himself Self
E! Live from the Red Carpet 2008-2016 TV Series Himself Self
The 42nd Annual People’s Choice Awards 2016 TV Movie Himself Self
Overhaulin’ 2015 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Rock in Rio 2015 TV Series Himself – Performer Self
LiveXLive Presents Rock in Rio 2015 TV Movie Himself Self
Today 1993-2015 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
BBC News 8pm Summary 2015 TV Series short Himself Self
Paul McCartney: Early Days 2014 Video short Himself (uncredited) Self
Lost Songs: The Basement Tapes Continued 2014 Documentary Himself Self
Hollywood Film Awards 2014 TV Special Himself Self
Transcendence: A Singular Vision 2014 Video short Himself Self
Transcendence: Guarding the Threat 2014 Video short Himself Self
What Is ‘Transcendence’? 2014 Video short Himself Self
Don Rickles: One Night Only 2014 TV Special Himself Self
Made in Hollywood 2010-2014 TV Series Himself Self
Up Close with Carrie Keagan 2014 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
2014 MTV Movie Awards 2014 TV Special Himself – Presenter Self
Late Show with David Letterman 1999-2014 TV Series Himself – Guest / Himself Self
E! News 2014 TV Series Himself Self
The Night That Changed America: A Grammy Salute to the Beatles 2014 TV Special Himself Self
71st Golden Globe Awards 2014 TV Special Himself – Presenter (uncredited) Self
Riding the Rails of ‘The Lone Ranger’ 2013 Video short Himself Self
The Lone Ranger: Becoming a Cowboy 2013 Video short Himself Self
The American Cinematheque Tribute to Jerry Bruckheimer 2013 TV Movie Himself (pre-taped message) Self
Paul McCartney: Queenie Eye 2013 Video short Himself (uncredited) Self
Vivir de cine 2013 TV Series Himself Self
Daybreak 2011-2013 TV Series Himself Self
Celebrity Style Story 2013 TV Series Himself Self
Charlie Rose 1998-2013 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
CBS News Sunday Morning 2013 TV Series Himself – Guest Self
The Lone Ranger: Unmasked 2013 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Don’t Say No Until I Finish Talking: The Story of Richard D. Zanuck 2013 Documentary Himself – Interviewee Self
AMC Lone Ranger Q & A 2013 TV Special Himself Self
Cinema mil 2005 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
101 Most Starlicious Makeovers 2005 TV Movie documentary Himself, #24 Archive Footage
101 Juiciest Hollywood Hookups 2005 TV Mini-Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
The 100 Hottest Hotties 2005 TV Mini-Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
50 Steamiest Southern Stars 2005 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
Race to the Red Carpet 2005 TV Special Himself Archive Footage
Love Chain 2005 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Biography 2000-2004 TV Series documentary Himself / Mort Rainey Archive Footage
101 Biggest Celebrity Oops 2004 TV Special documentary Himself – #26: Things They Shouldn’t Have Said / Himself – #99: Johnny Depp and the Winona Tattoo Archive Footage
Inventing Grace, Touching Glory 2003 Documentary Himself Archive Footage
Celebrities Uncensored 2003 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
50 Greatest Teen Idols 2003 TV Movie documentary Himself, #30 Archive Footage
Making Bela 2002 Video documentary short Himself / Edward D. Wood Jr. Archive Footage
Pie Plates Over Hollywood 2002 Video documentary short Himself Archive Footage
If I Should Fall from Grace: The Shane MacGowan Story 2001 Documentary Himself (music video: “That Woman’s Got Me Drinking”) Archive Footage
Music Behind the Scenes 2001 TV Mini-Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
Donnie Brasco: Out of the Shadows 2000 Video documentary short Himself Archive Footage
The Directors 1999-2000 TV Series documentary Raoul Duke
Edward Scissorhands
Ed Wood
Archive Footage
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers: Playback 1995 Video documentary Eddie Archive Footage
Entertainment Tonight 2008-2017 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
The Insider 2016-2017 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Extra 2010-2017 TV Series Himself / Himself – Into the Woods Archive Footage
Ok! TV 2017 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Good Morning Britain 2016-2017 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Non mais t’as vu ce que t’écoutes 2017 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Torres Quevedo: Vol. 2 2016 Himself Archive Footage
L’IA et Mathieu 2016 TV Mini-Series Himself Archive Footage
The Drunken Peasants 2016 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Welcome to the Basement 2015 TV Series Glen Lantz Archive Footage
The 90s: Ten Years That Changed the World 2015 TV Movie documentary Himself (uncredited) Archive Footage
The Nightmare 2015/II Documentary Glen Lantz (uncredited) Archive Footage
The Wright Stuff 2015 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Inside Edition 2014 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
Tie Gang 2014 TV Series Glen Lantz Archive Footage
2nd Indie Fest of YouTube Videos 2014 2014 TV Movie Himself Archive Footage
Nostalgia Critic 2014 TV Series Mad Hatter Archive Footage
Le Fossoyeur de Films 2013 TV Mini-Series documentary Archive Footage
Movie Guide 2013 TV Series Tonto Archive Footage
Too Young to Die 2012 TV Series documentary Imaginarium Tony 1 Archive Footage
Samsung AACTA Awards 2012 TV Special Himself – Producer Archive Footage
The Graham Norton Show 2011 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Today 2011 TV Series Himself – Guest Archive Footage
Cinemassacre’s Monster Madness 2007-2011 TV Series documentary Glen Lantz
Guy on TV
Archive Footage
Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory 2011 Documentary Himself Archive Footage
Pearl Jam Twenty 2011 Documentary Himself (uncredited) Archive Footage
5 Second Movies 2008-2010 TV Series Captain Jack Sparrow
Sweeney Todd
Archive Footage
Gilles Jacob: CIitizen Cannes 2010 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
Never Sleep Again: The Elm Street Legacy 2010 Video documentary Himself Archive Footage
Live from Studio Five 2010 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Troldspejlet 2010 TV Series Himself / Mad Hatter Archive Footage
Gomorron 2009 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
España, plató de cine 2009 TV Movie documentary Dean Corso (uncredited) Archive Footage
E! True Hollywood Story 2002-2008 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
Spisok korabley 2008 Documentary Archive Footage
Oscar, que empiece el espectáculo 2008 TV Movie documentary Jack Sparrow
Sweeney Todd (uncredited)
Archive Footage
The O’Reilly Factor 2008 TV Series Sweeney Todd / Himself – ‘Patriot’ (segment “Pinheads & Patriots”) Archive Footage
50 Greatest Comedy Catchphrases 2008 TV Movie documentary Himself (uncredited) Archive Footage
MythBusters 2007 TV Series documentary Captain Jack Sparrow Archive Footage
Krügers Woche 2007 TV Series Captain Jack Sparrow Archive Footage
An Island’s Legacy: Preparing for TT 2007 Documentary Himself Archive Footage
Horâ wo 666 bai tanoshiku miru hô’hô 2007 TV Movie Himself Archive Footage
Planet Voice 2007 TV Series Jack Sparrow Archive Footage
Cómo conseguir un papel en Hollywood 2007 TV Movie documentary George Jung
Jack Sparrow
Archive Footage
Going to Pieces: The Rise and Fall of the Slasher Film 2006 Documentary Himself Archive Footage
Corazón de… 2005-2006 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Taff 2006 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
101 Sexiest Celebrity Bodies 2005 TV Movie Himself – Place #88 Archive Footage
El Magacine 2005 TV Series Himself Archive Footage

John Christopher Depp II Awards

Year Award Ceremony Nomination Movie Category
2016 Desert Palm Achievement Award Palm Springs International Film Festival Black Mass (2015) Won
2016 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Dramatic Movie Actor Won
2016 Modern Master Award Santa Barbara International Film Festival Won
2016 Yoga Award Yoga Awards Worst Foreign Actor Mortdecai (2015) Won
2015 Fondazione Mimmo Rotella Special Award Venice Film Festival Won
2014 Distinguished Artisan Award Hollywood Makeup Artist and Hair Stylist Guild Awards Johnny Depp is one of the most prominent and talented actors working today. The award-winning … More Won
2014 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Movie Actor Won
2014 Satellite Award Satellite Awards Best Ensemble, Motion Picture Into the Woods (2014) Won
2013 Blimp Award Kids’ Choice Awards, USA Favorite Movie Actor Dark Shadows (2012) Won
2012 MTV Generation Award MTV Movie Awards Won
2012 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Movie Actor Won
2012 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Animated Movie Voice Rango (2011) Won
2011 Blimp Award Kids’ Choice Awards, USA Favorite Movie Actor Alice in Wonderland (2010) Won
2011 National Movie Award National Movie Awards, UK Screen Icon Won
2011 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Movie Actor Won
2011 Rembrandt Award Rembrandt Awards Best International Actor (Beste Buitenlandse Acteur) Alice in Wonderland (2010) Won
2011 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie Actor: Action The Tourist (2010) Won
2011 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Awards Choice Animated Movie: Voice Rango (2011) Won
2010 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Movie Actor Won
2010 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Movie Actor of the Decade Won
2009 Career Achievement Award Bahamas International Film Festival Won
2008 Golden Globe Golden Globes, USA Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture – Comedy or Musical Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007) Won
2008 Jupiter Award Jupiter Award Best International Actor Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End (2007) Won
2008 Blimp Award Kids’ Choice Awards, USA Favorite Male Movie Star Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End (2007) Won
2008 MTV Movie Award MTV Movie Awards Best Comedic Performance Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End (2007) Won
2008 MTV Movie Award MTV Movie Awards Best Villain Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007) Won
2008 National Movie Award National Movie Awards, UK Best Performance – Male Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007) Won
2008 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Male Movie Star Won
2008 Rembrandt Award Rembrandt Awards Best International Actor (Beste Buitenlandse Acteur) Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End (2007) Won
2008 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie Villain Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007) Won
2007 Golden Schmoes Golden Schmoes Awards Favorite Celebrity of the Year Won
2007 Jupiter Award Jupiter Award Best International Actor Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006) Won
2007 MTV Movie Award MTV Movie Awards Best Performance Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006) Won
2007 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Male Movie Star Won
2007 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Male Action Star Won
2007 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite On-Screen Match-Up Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006) Won
2007 Rembrandt Award Rembrandt Awards Best International Actor (Beste Buitenlandse Acteur) Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006) Won
2007 SFX Award SFX Awards, UK Best Actor Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006) Won
2007 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie Actor: Action Adventure Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End (2007) Won
2006 Bravo Otto Germany Bravo Otto Best Actor (Schauspieler) Won
2006 Empire Award Empire Awards, UK Best Actor Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005) Won
2006 NRJ Ciné Award NRJ Ciné Awards Best Look (Meilleur Look) Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005) Won
2006 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Male Movie Star Won
2006 Scream Award Scream Awards Most Heroic Performance Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006) Won
2006 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Awards Movies – Choice Actor: Drama/Action Adventure Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006) Won
2006 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Awards Movies – Choice Actor: Comedy Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005) Won
2005 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Male Movie Star Won
2005 WFCC Award Women Film Critics Circle Awards Most Offensive Male Character The Libertine (2004) Won
2004 Empire Award Empire Awards, UK Best Actor Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Won
2004 Golden Schmoes Golden Schmoes Awards Favorite Celebrity of the Year Won
2004 Audience Award Irish Film and Television Awards Best International Actor Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Won
2004 MTV Movie Award MTV Movie Awards Best Male Performance Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Won
2004 MTV Movie Award MTV Movie Awards, Mexico Best Look (Mejor Look) Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Won
2004 Actor Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Won
2004 SFX Award SFX Awards, UK Best Actor Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Won
2004 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie Liar Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Won
2004 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie Fight/Action Sequence Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Won
2003 ACCA Awards Circuit Community Awards Best Actor in a Leading Role Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Won
2003 Actor of the Year Hollywood Film Awards Won
2003 Jupiter Award Jupiter Award Best International Actor Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Won
2000 Blockbuster Entertainment Award Blockbuster Entertainment Awards Favorite Actor – Horror Sleepy Hollow (1999) Won
1999 Honorary César César Awards, France Won
1999 Star on the Walk of Fame Walk of Fame Motion Picture On 16 November 1999. At 7020 Hollywood Blvd. Won
1998 Golden Aries Russian Guild of Film Critics Best Foreign Actor Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998) Won
1996 ALFS Award London Critics Circle Film Awards Actor of the Year Ed Wood (1994) Won
1995 Jupiter Award Jupiter Award Best International Actor Don Juan DeMarco (1994) Won
1990 ShoWest Award ShoWest Convention, USA Male Star of Tomorrow Won
2016 Desert Palm Achievement Award Palm Springs International Film Festival Black Mass (2015) Nominated
2016 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Dramatic Movie Actor Nominated
2016 Modern Master Award Santa Barbara International Film Festival Nominated
2016 Yoga Award Yoga Awards Worst Foreign Actor Mortdecai (2015) Nominated
2015 Fondazione Mimmo Rotella Special Award Venice Film Festival Nominated
2014 Distinguished Artisan Award Hollywood Makeup Artist and Hair Stylist Guild Awards Johnny Depp is one of the most prominent and talented actors working today. The award-winning … More Nominated
2014 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Movie Actor Nominated
2014 Satellite Award Satellite Awards Best Ensemble, Motion Picture Into the Woods (2014) Nominated
2013 Blimp Award Kids’ Choice Awards, USA Favorite Movie Actor Dark Shadows (2012) Nominated
2012 MTV Generation Award MTV Movie Awards Nominated
2012 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Movie Actor Nominated
2012 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Animated Movie Voice Rango (2011) Nominated
2011 Blimp Award Kids’ Choice Awards, USA Favorite Movie Actor Alice in Wonderland (2010) Nominated
2011 National Movie Award National Movie Awards, UK Screen Icon Nominated
2011 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Movie Actor Nominated
2011 Rembrandt Award Rembrandt Awards Best International Actor (Beste Buitenlandse Acteur) Alice in Wonderland (2010) Nominated
2011 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie Actor: Action The Tourist (2010) Nominated
2011 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Awards Choice Animated Movie: Voice Rango (2011) Nominated
2010 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Movie Actor Nominated
2010 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Movie Actor of the Decade Nominated
2009 Career Achievement Award Bahamas International Film Festival Nominated
2008 Golden Globe Golden Globes, USA Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture – Comedy or Musical Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007) Nominated
2008 Jupiter Award Jupiter Award Best International Actor Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End (2007) Nominated
2008 Blimp Award Kids’ Choice Awards, USA Favorite Male Movie Star Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End (2007) Nominated
2008 MTV Movie Award MTV Movie Awards Best Comedic Performance Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End (2007) Nominated
2008 MTV Movie Award MTV Movie Awards Best Villain Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007) Nominated
2008 National Movie Award National Movie Awards, UK Best Performance – Male Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007) Nominated
2008 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Male Movie Star Nominated
2008 Rembrandt Award Rembrandt Awards Best International Actor (Beste Buitenlandse Acteur) Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End (2007) Nominated
2008 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie Villain Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007) Nominated
2007 Golden Schmoes Golden Schmoes Awards Favorite Celebrity of the Year Nominated
2007 Jupiter Award Jupiter Award Best International Actor Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006) Nominated
2007 MTV Movie Award MTV Movie Awards Best Performance Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006) Nominated
2007 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Male Movie Star Nominated
2007 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Male Action Star Nominated
2007 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite On-Screen Match-Up Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006) Nominated
2007 Rembrandt Award Rembrandt Awards Best International Actor (Beste Buitenlandse Acteur) Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006) Nominated
2007 SFX Award SFX Awards, UK Best Actor Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006) Nominated
2007 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie Actor: Action Adventure Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End (2007) Nominated
2006 Bravo Otto Germany Bravo Otto Best Actor (Schauspieler) Nominated
2006 Empire Award Empire Awards, UK Best Actor Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005) Nominated
2006 NRJ Ciné Award NRJ Ciné Awards Best Look (Meilleur Look) Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005) Nominated
2006 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Male Movie Star Nominated
2006 Scream Award Scream Awards Most Heroic Performance Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006) Nominated
2006 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Awards Movies – Choice Actor: Drama/Action Adventure Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest (2006) Nominated
2006 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Awards Movies – Choice Actor: Comedy Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005) Nominated
2005 People’s Choice Award People’s Choice Awards, USA Favorite Male Movie Star Nominated
2005 WFCC Award Women Film Critics Circle Awards Most Offensive Male Character The Libertine (2004) Nominated
2004 Empire Award Empire Awards, UK Best Actor Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Nominated
2004 Golden Schmoes Golden Schmoes Awards Favorite Celebrity of the Year Nominated
2004 Audience Award Irish Film and Television Awards Best International Actor Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Nominated
2004 MTV Movie Award MTV Movie Awards Best Male Performance Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Nominated
2004 MTV Movie Award MTV Movie Awards, Mexico Best Look (Mejor Look) Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Nominated
2004 Actor Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Nominated
2004 SFX Award SFX Awards, UK Best Actor Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Nominated
2004 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie Liar Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Nominated
2004 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie Fight/Action Sequence Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Nominated
2003 ACCA Awards Circuit Community Awards Best Actor in a Leading Role Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Nominated
2003 Actor of the Year Hollywood Film Awards Nominated
2003 Jupiter Award Jupiter Award Best International Actor Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Nominated
2000 Blockbuster Entertainment Award Blockbuster Entertainment Awards Favorite Actor – Horror Sleepy Hollow (1999) Nominated
1999 Honorary César César Awards, France Nominated
1999 Star on the Walk of Fame Walk of Fame Motion Picture On 16 November 1999. At 7020 Hollywood Blvd. Nominated
1998 Golden Aries Russian Guild of Film Critics Best Foreign Actor Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998) Nominated
1996 ALFS Award London Critics Circle Film Awards Actor of the Year Ed Wood (1994) Nominated
1995 Jupiter Award Jupiter Award Best International Actor Don Juan DeMarco (1994) Nominated
1990 ShoWest Award ShoWest Convention, USA Male Star of Tomorrow Nominated