Johnny Depp Opens Up Private Bahamian Getaway

First Posted: 07/02/09 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 02:25 PM ET

Johnny Depp

Johnny Depp took the July issue of Vanity Fair to his private Bahamian island where he reminisced about Marlon Brando, watched 'Tropic Thunder' and talked about his island getaway.

The whole article is NOT online, but highlights from the press release include Depp saying of Tom Cruise in "Thunder": "That's the best I've ever seen Cruise."

When he told Marlon Brando he was buying an island in 1994, the icon got practical, saying "What's the elevation? How protected are you?" Brando, according to Depp, was being sensible, focused, and paternal. "With hurricanes and all, he just didn't want me to make a mistake."

He uses the island as a retreat, "I can come down here and disappear. I spent the Christmas season here with Vanessa and the kids."

The whole interview is available in the hard copy of the magazine, available June 3 in NY and LA.


THE FULL PRESS RELEASE:
NEW YORK, N.Y.--Johnny Depp shows Vanity Fair contributing editor Douglas Brinkley around his 45-acre private Bahamian island, Little Hall's Pond Cay, and tells Brinkley that the island "is my decompression. It's my way of trying to return to normalcy.... Escapism is survival to me."

When Brinkley asks Depp if there is any Hollywood icon he still hopes to spend time with, he says, "I already met her. Elizabeth Taylor." Depp once attended dinner with Taylor and found her to be "the best old-school dame I've ever met. A regular, wonderful person. Billy Bob Thornton and Steve Martin were also there. Boy, did I take to her. For dinner she ordered liver and onions and just smothered them with salt. I admired that. She's an astonishingly great broad."

Little Hall's Pond has six different beaches--named after Depp's partner, Vanessa Paradis, and their children, Lily Rose and Jack, as well as his mentors Hunter S. Thompson and Marlon Brando--each with a personality and cove of its own, and one patch of water deemed "Heath's Place" after the late actor Heath Ledger. There are several small residences, all solar-powered, and transportation consists of a fleet of green golf carts.

"I don't think I'd ever seen any place so pure and beautiful," Depp tells Brinkley of the island. "You can feel your pulse rate drop about 20 beats. It's instant freedom. And that rare beast--simplicity--can be had. And a little morsel of anonymity.... Whenever I was getting frustrated about being 'novelty boy' and making movies, I told myself, Calm down. I can come down here and disappear. I spent the Christmas season here with Vanessa and the kids. You can feed hot dogs to the nurse sharks in the Exumas--but it's best to not swim when doing it."

Depp spent much of the last year in Chicago filming Public Enemies, and tells Brinkley that it has become his favorite American city. "Everybody [in Chicago] treated me normal. They'd say, 'Hey, Johnny,' then left me alone.... I visited the Art Institute and the Chicago Music Exchange. I loved looking out the car window at all those incredible neighborhoods and architecture."

Depp laments the political correctness of modern Hollywood, telling Brinkley he pines for the old iconoclasts: "Where is our generation of Dean Martins and Frank Sinatras? And the Georgie Jessels and Walter Brennans? I want Tiny Tim and Bix Beiderbecke back."

Of Tom Cruise's performance as studio head Les Grossman in last summer's Tropic Thunder, Depp says, "That's the best I've ever seen Cruise." When asked if Cruise's portrayal reminds Depp of any Hollywood executives, he says, "All of them."

Whenever Depp gets bored or can't sleep, he paints. "When I can focus on something like guitar or painting, I do," he says. "I started painting people I admire, like Kerouac, Bob Dylan, Nelson Algren, Marlon Brando, Patti Smith, my girl, my kids. I painted Hunter a couple of times. Keith Richards. What I love to do is paint people's faces, y'know, their eyes. Because you want to find that emotion, see what's going on behind their eyes."

Depp talks about his two late mentors, Marlon Brando and Hunter S. Thompson, each of whom imparted his share of wisdom. He recalls a conversation he had with Brando in 1994, when he was poised to purchase Little Hall's Pond, but instead of expressing outright enthusiasm, Brando--who once lived on the French Polynesian atoll of Tetiaroa--asked a series of pragmatic questions: "What's the elevation? How protected are you?" Brando, according to Depp, was being sensible, focused, and paternal. "With hurricanes and all, he just didn't want me to make a mistake."

Depp says what he misses about Thompson "isn't the Too Much Fun Club stuff. It was his steady advice. His radar detector was spot-on. He knew instantly if he didn't like somebody." Depp says the beach he named after Hunter on his island is "the most savage and exposed of all the beaches. Gonzo Beach is pure Hunter."

Talking to Brinkley about his future on the island, Depp says: "Nobody is going to ever ruin the Land and Sea Park. It's like a rare gem, a diamond. I look forward to my kids growing up on the island, spending months out of the year here ... learning about sea life and how to protect sea life ... and their kids growing up here, and so on.... Theoretically, this place can add years to your life." Then he quotes the old adage: "Money doesn't buy you happiness. But it buys you a big enough yacht to sail right up to it."

The July issue of Vanity Fair hits newsstands in New York and Los Angeles on June 3 and nationally on June 9.

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Johnny Depp took the July issue of Vanity Fair to his private Bahamian island where he reminisced about Marlon Brando, watched 'Tropic Thunder' and talked about his island getaway. The whole article ...
Johnny Depp took the July issue of Vanity Fair to his private Bahamian island where he reminisced about Marlon Brando, watched 'Tropic Thunder' and talked about his island getaway. The whole article ...
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04:39 AM on 06/11/2009
I read this same interview in Rolling Stone in 2005.
olddognewtrick
Half full or half empty...It's the same
12:51 AM on 06/03/2009
Will you please either remake THE AVIATOR or do some other film with you as Howard Hughes.
Gasparilla
all the intangibles
08:01 PM on 06/02/2009
One movie I loved and it gets little notice. Secret Window. One of those you never saw it coming moments.
01:13 PM on 06/02/2009
Senor Depp has "had work done," it would seem.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SunnyT
01:48 PM on 06/02/2009
I seriously doubt that. I know his face pretty well. Nothing's changed on a surgical level.
10:11 AM on 06/02/2009
When I read the title of the story, I read "Private Benjamin getaway" instead of "Private Bahamian Getaway." I thought he was going to boot camp. In the immortal words of Emily Litella: "Never mind."
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WilliamL
09:07 AM on 06/02/2009
what was the last real film he made?

the pirate non-sense do not count as film
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SunnyT
10:53 AM on 06/02/2009
Real films: co-starring with Al Pacino in Donnie Brasco; the Roman Polanski film, The Ninth Gate; the Stephen King story, Secret Window; practically unrecognizable as Hunter Thompson in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas; cocky and scared in Blow; sweet and vulnerable in What's Eating Gilbert Grape?; the dark and moody inspector pursuing Jack the Ripper in From Hell; the mystical Western, Dead Man.

Yet Pirates of the Caribbean 3 is my favorite. My man JD is a comic genius!
09:04 AM on 06/02/2009
He is very handsome .love him
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Emerald1943
08:43 AM on 06/02/2009
I was really disappointed that Johnny did not win the Academy Award for the first "Pirates". He took that role and made it his own. I don't think there is another actor anywhere in the world that could do what he did with "Captain Jack Sparrow".

One thing I've always wondered...he seems to make films that HE wants to make, not usually what Hollywood demands, and every role is something completely different. I'd love to know how he chooses a script.

IMHO, one of the most talented actors in the world! Can't wait for the next film!
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WilliamL
09:05 AM on 06/02/2009
yeah, an Oscar for that garbage.
02:29 PM on 06/02/2009
Wow, what is your problem? Obviously you don't like Johnny Depp since you only have negative things to say about him. That's fine, he's not everyone's cup of tea but what's the point of clicking into an article about him and then commenting on said article that you more then likely didn't read?

Emerald1943 - Johnny will be getting that Oscar soon and hopefully it will be for Public Enemies.
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SunnyT
01:07 PM on 06/02/2009
I agree! I thought he had a great chance to win the Oscar for his creation of that unique character.

" It can be said that his performance is original in its every atom. There has never been a pirate, or for that matter a human being, like this in any other movie. "

High praise from Roger Ebert about Johnny Depp as Captain Jack Sparrow in 'Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl.'
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Thaigold
Life is Good
08:35 AM on 06/02/2009
The "Deppster" is a cinematic genius. 10-stars. And this accolade comes from an old dude that went to private school on Hollywood Blvd in 1943...just down the street from the Pantages.
Gasparilla
all the intangibles
07:28 AM on 06/02/2009
I thought the first pirate movie was great, due to his performance. I thought the next two were just the typical substitute of "special effects" for any real script. I see he's a Liz Taylor fan. Back in the 50s and 60s she was great in movies like Place in the Sun and Giant. Like Johnny, she made movies better by just being in them.
02:11 AM on 06/02/2009
i got simplicity out the ass. hardly rare in these parts and i'm in san francisco.
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MagicalPossibilities
Question everything...
01:16 AM on 06/02/2009
Johnny Depp is hottttt!
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jonthebru
Li 'dat!
12:44 AM on 06/02/2009
I approve Johnny, you're the best, use plenty of sunscreen please, especially on your Kids.
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12:44 AM on 06/02/2009
Now I understand why he made those terrible Pirate movies.
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Tommygun264
2Q2BSTR8
03:57 AM on 06/02/2009
The first one was good for a laugh. However, the sequels were unbearable.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
atila
11:35 PM on 06/01/2009
The best actor of his generation is the most intelligent too,always low profile instead to spend money in bling bling or the last stu pid toy on the market he got for himself and his family a little island,I really envy and admire him.