The Sword and Laser discussion
Real People Named After Fictional Characters

I have a friend with last name Walker who, if he has a son, wants to name him Luke Sky. I would think he's kidding but I know how crazy people can be with names; my oldest nephew's name still makes me shake my head (even though he's not named after a character of any sort).

But I've never met someone like that in real life before.
This one was especially surprising, given all the Star Wars hype happening currently.


That has to border on child abuse.

Enh. She didn't even have the weirdest name in my circle of friends. There was Gwydion (AKA Guido), Lenore, Rawls, Cyrus, Fabian, Sass(afras), Tor, and you don't even want to know about the nicknames (we had a Cooter, a Hussy and a Bigguns...)

I tried to give my son the middle name of Lazarus, after Lazarus Long, but my wife said no.

And I always did think it was cool for Demi and Bruce to name there daughter Scout. Decent enough of a name, and a cool character to boot.

He had to fill out the enrolment forms twice, because the admission officer thought it was a joke the first time round.


She'd named them after car brands: Mercedes, Lexus and Infiniti.

It's the Greek spelling of the biblical Leah. Luke is right out of the bible as well.

It's the Greek spelling of the biblical Leah. Luke is right out of the bible as well."
He was a total rehash of Matt. I mean, c'mon, get some original ideas, dude.
::: watches sky for lightning bolts :::

That's kind of hilarious.

Worse one was when my wife was mispronouncing a woman's daughters name and the whole pharmacy got yelled at. It was spelled A-Ya and they were pronouncing it Eye-yah and the woman flipped out screaming they were stupid because her daughters name was OBVIOUSLY pronounced... A Dash yuh....thats right you were supposed to say the dash.
also came across between us...Master, Sparkles, Cinderella, Two Mill, im forgetting a bunch.
But also have heard Luke and Leia as siblings before.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sky_King

Worse one was when my wife was mispronouncing a woman's daughters name and the whole ..."
Yes, I've seen the names where you pronounce the dash. So bad. We had one recently names Pryns (Prince). America needs to adopt naming rules like New Zealand. There are certain names banned and I think any punctuation is forbidden.


I was the manager of a restaurant in Southern California almost 15 years ago and hired a bartender in his mid-twenties named "Strider". Our interview consisted of about 3 questions, and then ended with something along the lines of, "So, your parents were big LOTR fans, huh?" He said yes, and relaxed a bit because he was obviously tired of explaining his name. Then I said "me too....you're hired." One of our best employees ever.




It's a traditional Irish name.

One of my friends in high school had a sister who was named Willa Rose Suter.


That doesn't seem like an odd name to me. I have a cousin and a former classmate named Siobhan. Then again, a lot of Irish where I'm from.
Whether it's intentional or not, a lot of us (me included) have a name that has come into common use in the English world from an originally fictional character from mythology (Helen, Camilla, Daphne etc) or Old Testament stories (Adam, David, Daniel etc)
Star Wars might be the modern day version of the bible, as far as naming conventions go. ;-) Probably not.
In my day a kid with an unusual name would have stood out. Now anything goes, within reason.
Star Wars might be the modern day version of the bible, as far as naming conventions go. ;-) Probably not.
In my day a kid with an unusual name would have stood out. Now anything goes, within reason.

First few years of the show I was obsessed with it...

Im not sure what Ryans Hope is exactly Ive never watched a daytime soap in my life or would I, but the name appears in Orphan Black and I believe The Iron Druid series and my wifes families are from Scotland and Ireland so the name is pretty common to them.

Darth Judy.
R2Deepak.
Finn No-not-from-Adventure-Time-from-Star-Wars.
In South Africa/Lesotho there is the surname Ts'olo. You name a kid Hans and voila, one space rogue.

I have talked to people online with children named Ripley, Peter Parker (first and Middle), Brothers named Duncan and Conner specifically due to Highlander, I have a friend who named her son Legion Yeah the bible version, and Kevin Smith Named his Daughter Harley Quinn Smith.



Agreed - one or the other has to be boring. I want to name my son Christian King (like Jesus haha) - but my wife wouldn't let me name him Christian, so it will be his middle name (Aiden Christian King, with the nice initials ACK). And Aiden was an Irish god of the underworld, so he can be king of the underworld, while I am king of the sky :P
But I suppose joke names while funny for parents can be downright cruel for kids, so I should listen to my wife :)
Funny story - I told my mom, and she said my dad (who is now deceased) had also wanted to name me Christian, but she also but the kibosh on it.

I like "Christian" as a set of sounds, but it kind of puts pressure on the kid to be...well, Christian. A pressure that I think is unfair. Christopher means "Christ bearer", but there's enough distance on that meaning that I don't think most Christophers think about it.

A neighbor of a high school buddy was also named Christa; turns out her full name was (probably still is) Christa Chandra Leers. I am not kidding.
If you look in the Dayton, Ohio, phone book, under W you'll find Gandolf T. Wizard. He's been in the book for at least 35 years. We called him once back in the 80s and asked for Bilbo. The woman who answered laughed and said they get that a lot. She wouldn't tell us why he has that name, though. Witness relocation to protect him from Saruman, perhaps.

Becoming Christian was certainly not the intent. The intent was more one of blasphemy, plus I liked the alliteration. This is a good case in point of potential misunderstanding :)
While we are on the subject of baby names, I've been looking at nursery themes. I found one lady who was doing a kraken/steampunk nursery. That's pretty awesome. My idea of a Lovecraftian nursery was rejected though I can still sprinkle around some Cthulhu plushies.




That's... yeah... unfortunate.

The one and only time I had to check someone's I.D. as part of a job related function, I noticed she was born on May 25th, 1977. How cool is that? Born on Star Wars Wednesday. I should've asked her if she was a fan of the movie.
Trike wrote: "Has anyone else met someone named after a fictional character?"
A Radio Shack I used to shop at had an employee with Tony Stark on his name tag. It took me forever to figure out why that name sounded familiar.




It's not that different that naming a baby "Princess", though, isn't it? And it falls off the tongue nicely. Not that I'd name any child of mine "Princess", at least not in English. It's a little too cute.

Books mentioned in this topic
The Starcrossed (other topics)Howl’s Moving Castle (other topics)
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Perelandra (other topics)
Perelandra (other topics)
Until tonight.
While at the ER (everything is fine, excellent docs sorted things out; no, it had nothing to do with my fiction addiction) the nurse was named "Leia".
Here's proof:
I said to her, "Has it been annoying lately to have your name?" She laughed and said it hadn't been too bad. "I just tell people I'm a princess," she added. She said it was worse when she was a kid and in college. She was born in September of '77, so yes, she's named after the character.
Has anyone else met someone named after a fictional character?