Before there was the Lone Ranger and Tonto, there was… Elizabeth Key and Chief Kanagatucko? New research from Ancestry.com reveals both Armie Hammer and Johnny Depp – the leading actors of Walt Disney Pictures’ “The Lone Ranger” – are direct descendants of two real American freedom fighters. Armie Hammer Is Descended from Cherokee Chief Kanagatucko and Johnny Depp’s 8th Great-Grandmother Is Elizabeth Key, the first African-American Slave to Sue for Freedom
-
Who Was Elizabeth Key?
Unlike Johnny Depp’s vigilante character Tonto, his ancestor Elizabeth Key worked within the law to win her freedom. Born to a British Aristocrat father and an African American mother, Key successfully sued for her freedom and that of her infant son in the mid-1600s. Invoking British colonial law, which stated that civil status as being determined by the father, she won her freedom on July 21, 1656 in the colony of Virginia, where some of Depp’s family members have lived since the early 1600s.
http://blogs.ancestry.com/ancestry/2013/06/26/lone-ranger-heroes-hammer-depp-family-trees/
So Johnny Depp's genealogy has been worked up by professionals, notice that there is no mention of any NDN heritage.
In this article (June 30, 2013) the NDN heritage is discussed again in detail.
In today's San Francisco Chronicle, "Depp defying horse, skeptics to play Tonto" by Michael Ordona. Quote from article: "Depp has often invoked his own ancestry in expressing his desire to 'redress the balance of the way they have been mistreated in cinema.' His great-grandmother Mae Sloan would tell him as a boy of his American Indian blood, although the actor is unsure of the tribe, Creek or Cherokee."
Depp's Tonto appearance is based on a painting by (white artist) Kirby Sattler, "I am Crow." Depp says that when he saw the painting, at first thought that the crow was his headdress, but then he realized the crow was flying behind him. But he liked the idea of the crow as a headdress for Tonto, who is viewed as an eccentric by his own people.
And, another quote from Depp: "..They [the Commanche and Navajo] may have nothing, but they'll give you a piece of turquoise that has been in their family for 200 years. I've never met a warmer people."
Ugh.