Johnny Depp wanted to wear footie pajamas & bunny ears for ‘The Tourist’

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Much like the barrage of Angelina Jolie interviews, there are lots of new Johnny Depp interviews, all for The Tourist. Unfortunately, there aren’t really any new photos of him floating around, so we have to make due with some older pics, and some stills from The Tourist. Once again, Pop Sugar has some of the most extensive interview slices, and Johnny is cracking me up with some of his answers. He talks about how he can’t grow a full beard, so basically he had to wear a stunt beard glued to his face. But the funniest part is when he’s talking about the pajamas:

In terms of where you are at in your career as a global movie star, what makes you choose a project?
Johnny Depp: I never think of myself on those terms as a “huge global movie star,” so I can’t help but smile because it just doesn’t register as me. It still feels like I’m doing the same bits, just trying something different each time, exploring something new. It’s important to keep challenging myself and try to come up with some new face every now and again. Many years ago Marlon Brando asked me, “How many films do you do per year, kid?” I said, “I dunno, maybe three.” He said, “Too much. We only have so many faces in our pockets.” And I went, you know, that’s really true, but I feel like I still got a few faces left.

Many of your most famous characters have tons of elaborate costumes and makeup. What did you bring to your character Frank?
JD: The story, the script, and the character dictate where you’re going to go. I imagine someone I may have known in the past that reminds me of a character. [The Tourist’s] Frank has this heavily groomed beard, which I by the way can’t grow so was all glued on. It’s a perfectly landscaped beard, which came from a guy I knew years ago and I was always fascinated with, because it looked like something in a jar. I couldn’t believe someone could actually treat [a beard] so pristinely.

In The Tourist there’s a scene where you’re in pajamas; how did that come to be?
JD: I wanted footie pajamas with little bunny ears, but [the director] wouldn’t go for it. Initially he was supposed to be either in a towel or his underpants, but there was something about a grown man in pajamas that you’d pull out of Leave It to Beaver’s dad’s drawer. The imagery, juxtaposed with the background of Venice, I just thought there was something really funny about it.

The canal scenes are intense. Did you go in the dirty water or was that left to the stunt men?
JD: All that stuff — doing the stunts, being yanked down a Venice canal in a boat, being handcuffed to the railing — was way secondary to the immense fear that I had of going into “the drink.” The stunt guys who did have to go into [the canal] were on serious antibiotics like weeks beforehand. I remember being cuffed to that railing and getting ready to take off and saying to myself, you’re going in . . . you’re going into this water. Luckily, I didn’t, but it was pretty close a couple of times.

Did you have any actual tourist experiences while shooting in Venice?
JD: My tourist times were between the hours of 10 p.m. and 2 a.m. That was the only time that I could really wander and have a look around, because there’s virtually no one on the streets at that point. Everywhere you look is kind of a visual poem; I was amazed — these wonderful facades, clotheslines with people’s laundry, and little signs on churches “bread for the poor.” It’s a beautiful, magical place. That’s the Venice I like to see as opposed to going into the gondola and putting a flower in my teeth. I like the nighttime Venice, the quiet Venice, when it feels like the ghosts are around.

What sort of artistic freedom do you look for in roles? Was it always that way?
JD: Is there something in there outside the author’s intent that I can add that is maybe a little bit different, that is coming from the outside and is not done to death. Is there something I can add to make it interesting? I’ve always had that, it’s probably a bad habit. I remember doing Platoon back in ’86 with Oliver Stone. I was rewriting my dialogue, which is probably why he mostly cut me out of the film. I suppose Cry Baby was the first character I felt good about. With Edward Scissorhands, nobody really knew what I was going to do; even Tim [Burton], bless him, was a little nervous initially with my take on it, but it all worked out. I guess it probably comes from being locked into television for years and the parameters were so rigid there was no room for movement. There was no room to grow so I swore to myself after that I wouldn’t do that again. If I had to go back to construction, that’s OK, I was pretty good at that. Pumping gas, I can do that too.

Paris is home to you now. What makes you love the city so much?
JD: Everything. The literary history in Paris has been and always will be a fascination for me. The books that were written here, art history, paintings, painters who wandered these streets, great poets — it’s just always been magical for me and I’ve always oddly felt more at home here than anywhere else in the world. I suppose just to be surrounded by all this art, and all this incredible work that people have done over the years. You can feel. It’s still there, you still feel all those real writers. It’s very inspiring.

Your character in this movie is not Johnny Depp cool; how did you figure out what you wanted to do with this character?
JD: The idea was to make him really the everyman of the movie, the math teacher who doesn’t have particular highs or particular lows in his life and has a slight amount of OCD in his weird routines. [I wanted to] take this normal guy and put him in these high-stakes situations that were less than normal. The electronic cigarette was the device that would ring the alarm that he’s in panic mode.

The director Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck said you added the humor to the film; what is the story behind that?
JD: I thought, if you took this guy and put him in these situations, especially if he’s going to stick around, he has to recognize the level of absurdity in what he’s going through. Also, if I see a gag coming around the corner, I snatch it up. I can’t help myself. You spend 90 percent of the time when you’re working trying to make your costar laugh, and I guess some of it’s in the film.

What was it like meeting and working with Angelina?
She’s a real treat to get into the ring with. She’s a lot of fun and funny! She’s deeply committed to the work, has a great approach and is very smart. She also has a very very absurd and perverse sense of humor. We met, oddly, right before we did this, which was just weird because we have a lot of mutual friends, acquaintances, and people we’ve worked with. When we sat down together, it was kind of instant. We got each other. Within minutes we were yakking about our kids, the perils of parenthood and all that fun stuff.

Do you hope to have the chance to work with her again?
Boy, I certainly would like to think so. I hope so. If she’ll have me again, I’d be more than happy. She’s a good girl. I have a lot of respect for her. In the face of all that she, Brad, and the kids have to deal with, being globally under the microscope every second of the day, she’s grounded. She’s as cool, normal and low key [a woman] as you’d want to meet. She doesn’t take it all that seriously. She is a wonderful mommy, a great mommy, which you’ve gotta take your hat off to as well. And she’s out there trying to do things in the world, to help. She’s impressive. She’s a force.

[From Pop Sugar (two stories)]

Depp also talked more about Angelina when he was interviewed for Entertainment Tonight (the video is here). Depp describes Jolie as “a very normal girl” and that “Angelina’s life with Brad and the kids has been kind of overly shockingly documented and what I was pleasantly surprised by is she’s not really fazed by it. She’s a very normal girl and she’s very, very smart and very thoughtful, very kind. The two main things: This woman who has become this wonderful mother — she’s a fantastic mother — and very funny as well; good sense of humor.” He also talks a little about how he and Angelina brought their kids together, and how Jack Depp played videogames with Pax.

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Photos courtesy of Fame & WENN.

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36 Responses to “Johnny Depp wanted to wear footie pajamas & bunny ears for ‘The Tourist’”

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  1. Tess says:

    Johnny Depp, I think you’re a fantastic actor and I beg you to take Brando’s advice. Not just about how many roles you can play, but also in terms of how much of yourself you can reveal and still keep the magic.

  2. Heather says:

    Oh dear. Carb face.

    I think he has a really petite frame and a few extra pounds really shows up on him.

  3. Sylvie says:

    Just read a Johnny interview (might be old) where he said that Roman Polanksi isn’t a predator and just a gentle old man. He can go to hell.

  4. Raven Sparrow says:

    What I’d give to yak about my kids with Johnny ! 😀

  5. David says:

    He needs a bar of soap ASAP

  6. Eve says:

    She’s impressive. She’s a force.

    I so agree with that.

    As I fear they’ll show up eventually (those who hate her and will hate him from now on by association), I’ll say: how dare you, Johnny? How dare you say nice things about Angelina Jolie the Homewrecker? Now they’ll nitpick on every little thing you say so they can find reasons to hate you.

  7. LOVE ANGELINA says:

    OK Popsugar is shocking me. So good. Such good questions. 😀 It was like eating something yummy and hearty reading these interviews. OK I have to admit the Angie quotes were my favorite. I love that he says she is fun and such a great worker and great mommy. That was so sweet. I am way more convinced that Johnny and Angie create something amazing on screen in The Tourist and I am dying to watch it. Yes please Dec 10th can’t get here fast enough.

  8. truthSF says:

    LOL @ Eve!

  9. Fauxhemian Delight says:

    What he should have done is cut his hair, shaved his beard and gone on a diet. I love me some Johnny, but he looks awful in “The Tourist.”

  10. mslewis says:

    @sylvie . . . I kind of understand the hate some people have for Polanski. However, I don’t see the point of hating those who refuse to hate him. You don’t turn on your friend just because others have done so. What Polanski did happen decades ago and even the girl it happen to has forgiven him. People need to move on. Sorry, that’s my opinion.

    Moving on . . . I’m really liking these interviews. I know co-stars always seem to say nice things about each other but both Johnny and Angelina seem to have truly loved working together. I hope that shows up on screen. I’m really looking forward to this movie. The 10th can’t come soon enough for me. I just hope it’s not snowing and awful next weekend because this weekend we expect 3-4 inches of the nasty stuff.

  11. carrie says:

    his look is awful in “the tourist” and i feel his acting will be eccentric and Jolie’s acting will be “Bitch face” in a movie whom you don’t know it’s a comedy or a serious thriller

  12. Sakyiwaa says:

    i love his interview! yep, Popsugar is shocking me too!
    @ Fauxhemian Delight: and i suppose you thought he was uber hot as Edward Scissorhands and the Hatter, huh! you would’ve banged him with his scissors running through your hair…
    Captain Jack Sparrow…ummm, i can understand a little, if you’re into men with dirty teeth, painted-on extra eyes and eyeliner. but for Pete’s sake, he was playing “a character” (a math teacher)in The Tourist. like how hot was your math teacher? that people want actors to look the same perfect way everyday 365 days in a year in every movie they ever do is the most baffling thing to me.
    @carrie: you have a common problem. can’t see beyond the act into the art. if you like things always predictable, that’s on you. keep presuming.

  13. bellaluna says:

    LOVE. HIM.

    You love the characters he plays because you love him, not the other way around, ladies & gents. (OK, maybe not ALL the characters, but a darn lot them anyway!)

  14. Eve says:

    and i suppose you thought he was uber hot as Edward Scissorhands and the Hatter, huh! you would’ve banged him with his scissors running through your hair…

    @ Sakyiwaa:

    I don’t know about Fauxhemian Delight, but I’d hit them. Hard. And many times.

  15. Leticia says:

    @Sylvie, yes, you are right. It is a shame because Depp seems like a gracious and generous guy, but it is indefensible to defend Polanski.

  16. mln76 says:

    Both interviews are really interesting, better than most junket questions. I think the reason why there aren’t any pics is that he still has his gold teeth from Pirates in.

  17. sasa says:

    He looks repulsive in this movie. I know it’s a strong word but I’m not exaggerating my feelings towards this look at all.

  18. Fauxhemian Delight says:

    @sakyiwaa In Edward Scissorhands and Alice in Wonderland he was playing quirky, otherworldy characters so his look went with that. Here he’s just playing a TOURIST. A bloated, unattractive tourist apparently. And Jolie looks like she just stepped out of some glamor shoot for Vogue magazine. They look completely mismatched.

    I know he’s Johnny Depp. And I know he’s hot, but sometimes he looks like a younger version of Mickey Rourke and that is NOT a good thing. Wouldn’t it have been smarter to have him Donnie Brasco or Public Enemies Hot for this film?

    And for the record Sakyiwaa, if he’s not supposed to be hot because he’s playing a math teacher, then shouldn’t we cast unattractive people for almost EVERY movie? Maybe we should have an unattractive woman playing Angie’s role too. Most spies and secret agents aren’t actually attractive in real life. Why bother casting attractive movie stars at all unless they are playing fashion models?

    I thought the entire premise of this film was about how two of the most attractive people in the world are in a movie together. I didn’t realize people actually gave a crap about the storyline. And that people were actually interested in keeping it as real as possible. Math teacher=ugly so Johnny Depp must be bloated and unattractive. WTF.

  19. serena says:

    Well, I love this man.

  20. Johnny Depp's Girl says:

    God Bless, I want this man. He is my entire fantasy man…

    Call me Johnny! I love you!

  21. SamSam says:

    Some of you see bloated and unattractive, I see a reason I would have actually paid attention more in math classes.

    This look is still immensely hot, and gets me going. He just seems so.. dreamy. His ‘otherwordly’ personas do it for me in other ways, but I can totally get behind this one as well.

    • Amanda says:

      I agree! Hes so hot! And besides that his personality is what always gets me! Has so sweet in all his movies! Who wouldn’t find that attractive?

  22. Camille says:

    Great interview, I liked what he had to say about AJ, very interesting.

  23. Jeri says:

    Love Johnny. He’s intelligent and so very good looking.

  24. Sakyiwaa says:

    @Fauxhemian Delight; lol! okay, i get it. he shoulda been perfect for the role. he shoulda looked like a fashion model. ok, fine. be that as it may, movie stars that excel are movie stars cos they are attractive and artistic. like Depp. which is why he’s been so unconventional with his movie roles and which is why he wouldn’t bat an eyelash, if producers wanted him to play a somewhat unattractive human being. as far as the pairing, could it be as extreme as Beauty and the Beast? i think not. personally, if AJ wasn’t with BP i think she wouldn’t have minded going for a guy looking like that as long as she loved him. i mean Jonny Lee and BBT aren’t exactly showpieces. think Mona Lisa, a frumpy plain woman with a mysterious smile, then it goes on to become a priceless masterpiece. wanna bet that Da Vinci ever thought that would happen to a simple painting of his plain girlfriend! 🙂
    all i’m saying is: if you’re such a lover, cut Johhny some slack.

  25. Sakyiwaa says:

    @Eve; OMG! lmao! Naughty-naughty!

  26. spinner says:

    I’ll take my Johnny any way I can get him. He can do no wrong in my book.

  27. Camille says:

    To all the people going on about how ‘ugly’ you think he looks in ‘The Tourist’, for gods sake never, ever, ever see ‘The Libertine’. You would probably keel over in a heart attack. It would have to be his LEAST prettiest role ever, but damn he was awesome in it.
    Because yeah, actors should look and act the EXACT same way in EVERY role and be the hottest thing ever and forever. God forbid that they actually you know, act or become the character or something. GMAFB 🙄 .

  28. HakuraChii says:

    He just sounds like such a nice guy. I really don’t care for the facial hair (but I rarely like facial hair on any guy, reminds me of my dad >..>

  29. RB says:

    Camille, we must be among the very few who saw that atrocious movie. It made me dislike johnny depp for a long time. I don’t think it was even released in theatres – no one would distribute it. I saw it at the toronto film festival. But I wondered whether anyone outside that film festival ever heard of that movie.
    Edit – oh ok apparently it was released in theatres, I don’t remember it though.

  30. Camille says:

    @RB: sad that you didn’t like it, but it wasn’t an ‘easy’ film to watch though, so I get why you probably didn’t like it. I thought he was brilliant in it however.
    I didn’t see it at the cinema, but rented it, too expensive in my country to go to the movies all of the time. Consider me another film geek 😀 .

  31. Eve says:

    @ RB and Camille:

    Aside from some plot holes, I actually enjoyed The Libertine — the opening and ending monologues are fantastic. I even bought the DVD (two copies, one for myself and another one to give a friend for her birthday).

  32. RB says:

    Camille and Eve: maybe it was better than I remember – I think it was the sight of johnny depp’s face basically peeling off that left me with such a bad impression.

  33. nate says:

    he is the coolest man on earth in my book. but this is the first time i have seen him look not so hot.

  34. Camille says:

    @Eve: Yay another fan! 😀
    I have never gotten around to buying the DVD, but I will eventually.

  35. Emily says:

    @Camille, I’ve got that DVD. the worst part of it for me was Malcovich playing Charles II, he was completely miscast for that role. But yes, I’d agree that it was Depp’s least attractive role, by the end. Ugh.