No
No, the Mad Hatter doesn't die in the original book or in any of the movie adaptations.
In Lewis Carroll's "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland," the fate of the Mad Hatter is not explicitly mentioned, so his death is not described in the story. The character appears in various adaptations that may portray different outcomes for him.
Alice in Wonderland and Winnie the Pooh
Alice didn't die in either of the original Alice books, nor in the 1951 Disney movie.
cancer heart cancer
No, if you pay attention to the movie...Absalom says he's come to end of life and Alice ask if he is going to die and Absalom says No, Transforming-Hope this has help =D
one thing i know you can use red hair die
John Cavanagh - hatter - died in 1957.
George Clooney
yes
It all started in Oxford, England in a boat beneath a sunny sky where echoes fade and memories die. Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll), Reverend Duckworth, Alice Liddell (The Real Alice), Lorina Liddell, and Edith Liddell were all in that boat that famous day. Lewis was telling the three little girls of a marvelous place called Wonderland and Alice loved the stories so much that she asked him to give it to her as a book. So Lewis set to work and gave it to her for Christmas. Later his friend George Macdonald had his children read the story and they told Lewis to publish it. Thus the story was born on a boat. I suggest you read "Still She Haunts Me" it'll explain every detail of why the Wonderland was made.
Clyde Hatter died October 16, 1937, in Yosemite, KY, USA.