No, they are two completely different people, or animals rather! The White Rabbit leads Alice down the hole. He works for the queen. The March Hare is introduced at the tea party and is friends with the Hatter.
No, the White Rabbit and March Hare are not the same person. They are characters from Lewis Carroll's novel "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland." The White Rabbit is a herald-like character who is always in a hurry, while the March Hare is known for hosting the tea party with the Mad Hatter.
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In the book, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, the Hatter has tea with the March Hare, who is not a rabbit, but hares are similar. In the 1951 Disney animation, the March Hare is at the tea party, but the White Rabbit also visits briefly.
Michael Sheen voiced the White Rabbit, and Paul Whitehouse voiced the March Hare
There isn't a stuffed bunny in Alice in Wonderland. There is a rabbit who is called 'the White Rabbit', and there is a hare, who is called 'the March Hare'.In the movie, The Last Mimzy, there is a stuffed bunny named Mimzy. It is shown to be originally owned by Alice Liddell, the real little girl the Alice stories are theorized to have been based on. Throughout the movie there a couple of references to this. At one point the character Emma says, "I looked through the looking glass Mommy. I looked through it. Just like Alice." The Mimzy doll never actually appeared in the Alice in Wonderland stories, although the movie has sent many people searching for the references.
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In Disney's 1951 animation the Mad Hatter puts butter in the White Rabbit's watch.In the original books, nobody does, but the March Hare has put butter in the Hatter's watch.
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (Except the Mad Hatter is actually just called 'the Hatter' in the book.)
A hare and a rabbit are two different animals.
In the book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Alice visits three houses; the White Rabbit's house, the Duchess' house and the March Hare's House. The March Hare's house is where the mad tea party is being held, but as it is set out on the front lawn, Alice doesn't actually enter the house at all. The White Rabbit's house is where she grows and becomes stuck, and the Duchess' house is the one full of pepper which makes her sneeze. In the 1951 Disney version she visits the Hare and Rabbit's houses, as in the book, but doesn't visit the Duchess'.
A hare is an animal (similar to a rabbit, but with noticeable differences). See related links for more information on hares.The March Hare is a character from Alice in Wonderland. His name references the English phrase "mad as a March hare", which alludes to the frantic behavior of hares during the March mating season (although hares actually mate throughout spring).
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Alice, the White Queen, the Red Queen, the white rabbit, the Queen of Hearts, the Mad Hatter, the Cheshire Cat, the March Hare, Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum.