Look up mad hatter in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
The Mad Hatter is a character in Lewis Carroll's stories.
Mad Hatter may refer to:
Arts and entertainment
editFictional characters
edit- Mad Hatter (DC Comics), DC Comics character
- Mad Hatter, a Marvel Comics character associated with villain White Rabbit
- Mad Hatter, a character in Once Upon a Time
Film
edit- The Mad Hatter (1948 film), a 1948 Woody Woodpecker animated cartoon
- The Mad Hatters a 1935 British comedy film
- Breakfast in Hollywood, also known as The Mad Hatter, a 1946 American comedy film
Music
edit- The Mad Hatter (album), by Chick Corea, 1978
- Mad Hatter (album), by Bonham, 1992, and the album's title track
- The Madhatter, an EP by Bigelf, 2003
- "Mad Hatter", a song by The Stranglers from Aural Sculpture, 1984
- "Mad Hatter", a song by Lynyrd Skynyrd from Vicious Cycle, 2003
- "Mad Hatter", a song by Melanie Martinez from Cry Baby, 2015
- "Mad Hatter" (Avenged Sevenfold song), 2018
- "The Mad Hatter", a song by Cast from Mother Nature Calls, 1997
People with the nickname
edit- Mad Hatter (bank robber) (James Madison, born 1956/57)
- Albert Anastasia (1902–1957), American gangster
- James Larratt Battersby (1907–1955), British fascist and pacifist
- Todd Burns (born 1963), American baseball player
- Don Ebert (born 1959), American soccer player
- Clyde Hatter (1908–1937), American baseball player
- Les Miles (born 1953), American football coach
- Gregory Scarpa (1928–1994), American capo and hitman
- Leon Wilkeson (1952–2001), musician with Lynyrd Skynyrd
Other uses
edit- Mad Hatter (horse) (born 1916), an American Thoroughbred horse
- MadHatters, an a cappella group at the University of Wisconsin–Madison
- Mad hatter disease, or erethism, an occupational disease among hatmakers
- Danbury Mad Hatters, an American ice hockey team
- 492nd Fighter Squadron, U.S. Air Force, nicknamed The Madhatters
See also
edit- All pages with titles containing Mad Hatter
- Mad as a hatter (disambiguation)
- Hatter (disambiguation)
- The Mad Hatter Mystery, a 1933 detective story by John Dickson Carr
- V. R. Parton, chess variant inventor, inspired by the works of Lewis Carroll
- Chapelier Fou, a French electronic musician whose stage name is the French translation of Mad Hatter