Famous Name: Kylie

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Last weekend was the annual Sydney Mardi Gras Gay and Lesbian Street Parade, which for several years now has been held on the first Saturday in March. The parade is the culmination of a gay and lesbian festival, and combines political protest with a celebration of gay cultures and lifestyles, then ends with one enormous shindig that proves nobody can party like Sydney.

Recently-out Magda Szubanski was in attendance, looking pleased and slightly nervous, and the guest of honour at the post-parade Mardi Gras Party was pop diva Kylie Minogue, who last appeared at Mardi Gras fourteen years ago. Kylie waived her $16 000 appearance fee and performed for free.

Kylie began her career as a child actor, failed to join the Young Talent Time cast, as her sister Dannii did, then shot to fame playing teenage mechanic Charlene Edna Mitchell on soap opera Neighbours. Her wedding to Scott Robinson, played by Jason Donovan, attracted 20 million viewers in the UK. This was enough to take her to Britain to begin her career as a pop singer.

At first she was treated scornfully by the critics, and disdainfully labelled “the singing budgie” for being small and chirpy. However, she has become one of the British pop industry’s great survivors – constantly re-inventing her image to become a sex symbol, and from early on appreciatively embraced by the gay community as one of their icons.

She has overcome breast cancer, and at the age of 43, is regarded as Britain’s most powerful celebrity, and been named one of the 100 Hottest Women of All Time. She currently lives in London’s once fashionable Chelsea.

According to baby name books, the name Kylie means “boomerang” in an Aboriginal language, and if you are prepared to dig a little deeper, we are told that the word kylie comes from the Nyungar language from south-west Western Australia, and there are place names ending with -kylee to indicate that (for example, that a river is shaped like a boomerang).

However, a rival theory is that kylie refers not to a boomerang, but to the hunting stick, which isn’t curved and doesn’t come back, being used to bring down prey. I have certainly seen these hunting sticks being identified as kylies in texts over a century old, so this idea is hardly a new one.

Unfortunately for both these theories, when I consulted a Nyungar dictionary, the word kylie isn’t in it. A boomerang is called a kirli (KEER-lee), and a throwing stick is called a dowak. It would seem that kylie was a non-Indigenous slight corruption of the word kirli, which is very similar to the word for boomerang in the Walpiri language of Central Australia – karli.

I’m not sure how settlers confused dowak for kylie though; perhaps they misunderstood what the Aborigines were telling them, or lacked the cultural context to see that a boomerang and a throwing stick were two different tools.

It’s easier to understand why Australians of British descent latched onto it as a personal name in the 1950s and ’60s. It fit in so well with the trend for similar-sounding names of Irish origin, such as Kerry and Kelly that were also growing in popularity – a trend that is still going strong, as names such as Keeley, Keira, Kirra and Kirrily attest. Kylie just had that familiar “Australian sound”. It also seems to have increased the popularity of the male name Kyle.

The name Kylie first hit the charts in the 1950s, was Top 100 by the 1960s when Kylie Minogue was born, and peaked in the 1970s as the #2 name of that decade. By the 1990s it had left the Top 100, and in the last year or two has left the charts altogether.

The plummeting popularity of the name Kylie in the 1990s must surely owe something to comedienne Mary-Anne Fahey’s iconic character Kylie Mole from The Comedy Company sketch show. This befreckled, hoydenish schoolgirl, stuck in the permanent bad mood of adolescence, not only popularised the word bogan, but her second-best friend Rebecca appeared with her on the show, played by Kylie Minogue. Although she struck a chord with us youngsters, she gave the name Kylie a certain image that parents probably didn’t wish to bestow upon their daughters.

Top Baby Names from Regional New South Wales for 2011

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This follows on from Top Baby Names from Regional Victoria for 2011 – read that and you’ll understand how this one works.

The Hunter Valley

In the Hunter Valley around the city of Newcastle, the #1 name in the state, William, does not make the Top 4, being used less often than Hamish and Lincoln, who aren’t even Top 50 in the state. In the Hunter, William is actually quite a rare name, being used only a few times per year. On the girls’ list, #6 Charlotte doesn’t get a look in either.

Girls

  1. Mia (5), Olivia (3)
  2. Chloe (1)
  3. Ava (9), Ruby (2)
  4. Sophie (7)
  5. Amelia (10), Emily (12), Isabella (4), Ivy (33), Matilda (18)
  6. Evie (28), Zoe (16), Sienna (8)

Boys

  1. Lucas (2)
  2. Samuel (14), Lachlan (3)
  3. Jack (6), Liam (15), Oliver (5), Thomas (8)
  4. Eli (45), Ethan (4), Flynn (51), Hamish (67), Harrison (26), Noah (7), Riley (20), Xavier (22), Lincoln (82)

Albury-Wondonga

Albury and Wodonga are on the New South Wales-Victoria border, with a foot in either camp. For convenience, I have placed them under New South Wales. The Border Mail recorded birth notices for 321 boys and 340 girls; there were 15 sets of twins.

Girls

  1. Grace (13)
  2. Amelia (1), Charlotte (6), Chloe (2)
  3. Lily (14), Ruby (2)
  4. Ella (11), Georgia (23), Lucy (25), Millie (-), Olivia (3)
  5. Charli (87), Isla (22), Sophie (7)
  6. Addison (51), Ava (9), Hannah (19), Isabel (100), Mia (5), Molly (53), Scarlett (24), Zara (26)

Boys

  1. Charlie (18)
  2. Jack (6)
  3. Benjamin (11)
  4. Jake (28), Lachlan (3), Noah (7)
  5. Jacob (13), Thomas (8), William (1)
  6. Hunter (48), Jackson (40), Joshua (9), Liam (15), Max (17), Patrick (54), Xavier (22)
  7. Campbell (-), Cooper (10), Darcy (-), James (12), Levi (29), Logan (34), Oliver (5), Riley (20)

Cessnock

In the city of Cessnock, within the Hunter Valley, the most popular name for boys is Koby (96), and its variant spellings. Ashton (55) and Noah (7) tied for second place. The most popular girl’s name was Evie (28), and Hannah (19) was the runner-up. The Advertiser recorded 70 birth notices, 35 from each gender.

Wagga Wagga (pictured)

In the city of Wagga Wagga, the state’s central west, Oliver (5) is the most popular boy’s name, and for girls it is Ruby (2).

Popular names for girls include Charlotte (6), Sophie (7) and Zoe (16), and for boys it is Toby (62), Max (17) and Judd (-).

Celebrity Baby News: Guy and Jules Sebastian

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Pop star Guy Sebastian, and his wife Jules, welcomed their first child on March 3; a boy they have named Hudson James. Hudson Sebastian weighed 2.7 kg (6 pounds) at birth. Guy has revealed that they chose the name Hudson after the Hudson River, as they love New York and its river is their favourite thing about it.

Guy was born in Malaysia of Sri Lankan, British and Portuguese descent, and moved to Australia as a small boy. He sang and taught music in his Pentecostal church choir, and his career took off after he won the first series of Australian Idol in 2003. He has released six top ten platinum or multi-platinum albums, eight top 10 singles, including five number ones, and four of his singles have gone multi-platinum. His song Angels Brought Me Here was the highest-selling song in Australia in the past decade, and he has won six ARIA Awards. Guy has performed for Pope Benedict XVI, Queen Elizabeth II, and Oprah Whinfrey. Amongst his charity commitments, he is an ambassador for World Vision Australia, Golden Stave, and the Australian Red Cross. He has been a mentor on It Takes Two, and a judge for The X-Factor.

Guy met his wife Jules at church when they were both teenagers, and they have been dating since his university days. They were married after a lengthy courtship in 2008.

Jules’ pregnancy became the worst-kept secret in show business when Guy’s fellow judge from XFactor, Ronan Keating, accidentally blabbed it to the media. Guy was reportedly furious, but I’m sure by now he’s forgiven him.

Waltzing With …Toci

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This blog post was first published on March 4 2012, and edited and republished on February 24 2016

Today is the first Sunday in March, which means it’s Clean Up Australia Day. This environmental effort encourages people to clean up their own communities, and the concept went global after Australia pitched the idea to the United Nations – hence the birth of Clean Up The World, whose clean-up campaign is held on the third weekend in September (the northern hemisphere autumn).

Cleaning up seems suitable for the Lenten season, when we are supposed to be ridding ourselves of bad habits, and pulling back from the excesses of Christmas and New Year. Although Lent is an important period on the Christian calendar, it must have seemed natural to our ancestors, since late winter/early spring was a time of cleansing and purification to both the ancient Romans and the ancient Celts. This season was also the natural time for them to do their spring cleaning, and may have been inspired by the spring rains washing the land.

In the southern hemisphere, Lent occurs in the late summer and autumn. However, many cultures hold their festivals of cleansing and purification in the autumn instead of the spring, tying them to the harvest and preparations for winter.

For example, the Aztecs of central Mexico had Ochpaniztli, the Month of Sweeping, corresponding to the first twenty days of September. They didn’t just have a Clean Up Day – for three weeks, not only houses were cleaned, but everyone pitched in and cleaned the entire city. They also took communal sweat baths, that were designed to cleanse the body, mind and spirit. Then they fasted – not for a mere forty days, like Lent, but for eighty days.

The presiding goddess of the Month of Sweeping was Toci, who was called The Mother of the Gods, and also Heart of the Earth. She was a goddess of healing, and venerated by healers and midwives. Another of her names was the “grandmother of sweat baths”, and she was also a war goddess. Her war epithet was Woman of Discord.

The Month of Sweeping was not only cleansing, but also a time for sowing corn, ritual dancing, and military ceremonies. It was a busy time of year. (If you have even a dim knowledge of Aztec society, you will be able to guess what else was performed during Ochpaniztli to honour Toci).

Another of her names was Tlazolteotl, a goddess of purification who could cleanse both the body and the spirit. People confessed their sins to Tlazolteotl through a priest, upon which they were forgiven (although people confess their sins during Lent too, the Aztecs did it only once in their lives; I don’t know what happened if you sinned after your confession).

Tlazolteotl sent people sexually transmitted diseases to punish them for lechery, but she would heal and forgive them too. She also inspired people with the desires to commit acts of lewdness … clearly she was a complicated goddess. She was called She Who Eats Sin, The Death Caused by Lust, and She of Two Faces. Slightly confusingly, under her two-faced designation, she was believed to consist of four different sisters representing different stages of a woman’s life: Tiacapan, TeicuTlaco and Xocotzin.

Toci means “our grandmother” in the Nahuatl language, as she was a very ancient goddess. It might seem strange to give a baby a name that means “grandmother”. And yet obviously we hope our baby daughters will grow up to be old and wise, and we don’t have any problems giving them the names of their grandmother, or our own grandmother. There are several names in Native American languages which mean “grandmother”, so they must have been seen as appropriate.

Toci only shows up a few time in the records as a name given to girls in Mexico, so this is a rarity even in its country of origin. English-speakers can pronounce the name something like TOH-see, to rhyme with Josie. Not only an interesting heritage choice, Toci has an elusive multicultural feel.

Toci does almost qualify as a truly unique name. It’s simple, it’s not frilly, and is difficult to turn into a nickname. Its meaning is venerable, and its history dark and mysterious. I don’t think for a moment that the average person would choose the name Toci, but for some reason it fascinates me.

POLL RESULTS
Toci received an approval rating of 43%. 40% of people disliked the name, and only 8% liked it.

(Picture is Woman Sweeping the Floor, by Deb Schmit)

Chloe and William – #1 in New South Wales

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Looking at the girls’ Top 20, Chloe rose two places to take the #1 position, which she last held in 2006. Meanwhile, Isabella slipped from first place to #4.

The biggest gainer was Ava, who went up five places from #14 to #9; Sophie wasn’t far behind, upping herself four places from #11 to #7.

The biggest loser was Lily, who slid seven places down to #14. It seems that across the states, the name Lily is falling in popularity without ever reaching the top spot. Similar-sounding Emily went down four places, from #8 to #12.

Other than that, the list is about as lively as molasses, with Olivia, Mia, Charlotte, Sienna, Amelia, Ella, Sophia, Zoe and Emma stable, and Ruby, Grace, Matilda, Hannah and Jessica not changing position at all.

All the girls’ lists have been extremely conservative, and New South Wales seems the most conservative of all, with no new names in the Top 20 and the #1 name a retread. It does feel as if everyone has decided what their favourite girls’ names are, and they’re sticking with them.

On the boys’ Top 20, royal William maintains the #1 position which he has held since 2009.

The big mover and shaker was Lucas, who ascended eight places from #10 to reach the #2 spot. Maybe Lucas is gunning for first position. Other names which grew in popularity were Ethan, Benjamin and Lachlan. Yep Lachlan – still going strong.

Joshua fell the most, five places from #4 down to #9. While Jack was #1 in Victoria, in New South Wales it dropped four places, from #2 to #6. It seems that Jack the Lad is beginning to lose ground. Thomas and Cooper also decreased in popularity – names which were #1 in the ACT and Queensland.

Oliver, Noah, James, Samuel, Liam, Alexander and Isaac remained stable, and Jacob, Max and Riley didn’t move a muscle. I think New South Wales is the only state where Riley didn’t suffer a loss.

Charlie is new to the Top 20 at #18, while Daniel left the list.

Slightly more movement than the girls’ Top 20, but overall New South Wales didn’t change too much when it came to names at the top.

Further down the list, there have been some new developments though. Celebrity baby name Harper made her way onto the Top 100 at #57, indicating a very rapid rise.

Mila and Milla are both new on the list at #72 and #84. I was a little surprised to see that Mila is higher than Milla, but both these names have been fashionable for a while now.

Aaliyah is new on the list at #77. I predicted we’d see a greater proliferation in spellings of this name, but the original spelling is popular enough to make it to the Top 100. If spellings were combined, this name would be much, much higher.

As in Victoria and the ACT, Charlie is now Top 100 for girls as well as boys, since she joined the list at #93.

In other news, Taylor has gone from the Top 100, Ashley is still hanging on, and Tahlia has had a big slide from #47 to #81.

Over on the boy’s list, another celebrity baby name, Flynn, has made his mark, joining the Top 100 at #51. It’s an impressive start, and Flynn will probably be Top 50 in 2012.

Darcy has left the Top 100. Although it fell everywhere, I think New South Wales is the first state to abandon Darcy, and the reason is probably that it is starting to seem too feminine in usage.

Phoenix has gone from the Top 100 after just one year – was it a flash in the pan, or is it still gathering momentum? Felix is new to the list, and seems like the perfect replacement. Braxton is another new-name-with-an-X for boys.

Ali has done well, climbing from #93 to #71. It’s a sign of Arabic names doing well in general, and it’s also a good cultural cross-over name.

A surprise success is John, who has risen from barely-there #99 to #77 – quite a jump up for a name that many pegged as being in decline.

 

Top 100 Baby Girl Names in New South Wales for 2011

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  1. Chloe
  2. Ruby
  3. Olivia
  4. Isabella
  5. Mia
  6. Charlotte
  7. Sophie
  8. Sienna
  9. Ava
  10. Amelia
  11. Ella
  12. Emily
  13. Grace
  14. Lily
  15. Sophia
  16. Zoe
  17. Emma
  18. Matilda
  19. Hannah
  20. Jessica
  21. Eva
  22. Isla
  23. Georgia
  24. Scarlett
  25. Lucy
  26. Zara
  27. Abigail
  28. Evie
  29. Jasmine
  30. Isabelle
  31. Sarah
  32. Sofia
  33. Ivy
  34. Lilly
  35. Maddison
  36. Layla
  37. Chelsea
  38. Maya
  39. Madison
  40. Summer
  41. Alexis
  42. Holly
  43. Savannah
  44. Elizabeth
  45. Imogen
  46. Annabelle
  47. Lara
  48. Alice
  49. Hayley
  50. Bella
  51. Addison
  52. Audrey
  53. Molly
  54. Stella
  55. Alyssa
  56. Willow
  57. Harper
  58. Ellie
  59. Anna
  60. Natalie
  61. Phoebe
  62. Lillian
  63. Claire
  64. Gabriella
  65. Rose
  66. Mikayla
  67. Paige
  68. Piper
  69. Evelyn
  70. Madeline
  71. Jade
  72. Mila
  73. Violet
  74. Samantha
  75. Victoria
  76. Eliza
  77. Aaliyah
  78. Poppy
  79. Indiana
  80. Leah
  81. Tahlia
  82. Mackenzie
  83. Erin
  84. Milla
  85. Caitlin
  86. Amelie
  87. Charli
  88. Alana
  89. Lola
  90. Ashley
  91. Kayla
  92. Angelina
  93. Charlie
  94. Madeleine
  95. Eden
  96. Eloise
  97. Alexandra
  98. Amber
  99. Eve
  100. Isabel

Top 100 Baby Boy Names in New South Wales for 2011

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  1. William
  2. Lucas
  3. Lachlan
  4. Ethan
  5. Oliver
  6. Jack
  7. Noah
  8. Thomas
  9. Joshua
  10. Cooper
  11. Benjamin
  12. James
  13. Jacob
  14. Samuel
  15. Liam
  16. Alexander
  17. Max
  18. Charlie
  19. Isaac
  20. Riley
  21. Jayden
  22. Xavier
  23. Ryan
  24. Daniel
  25. Tyler
  26. Harrison
  27. Mason
  28. Jake
  29. Levi
  30. Harry
  31. Oscar
  32. Matthew
  33. Luke
  34. Logan
  35. Michael
  36. Nicholas
  37. Aiden
  38. Sebastian
  39. Henry
  40. Jackson
  41. Dylan
  42. Hayden
  43. Joseph
  44. Elijah
  45. Eli
  46. Blake
  47. Archie
  48. Hunter
  49. Adam
  50. Beau
  51. Flynn
  52. Connor
  53. Zachary
  54. Patrick
  55. Ashton
  56. Christian
  57. George
  58. Finn
  59. Nathan
  60. Nate
  61. Angus
  62. Toby
  63. Jordan
  64. Bailey
  65. Leo
  66. Anthony
  67. Hamish
  68. Edward
  69. Caleb
  70. Andrew
  71. Ali
  72. Marcus
  73. Charles
  74. Cameron
  75. Callum
  76. Zac
  77. John
  78. David
  79. Luca
  80. Mitchell
  81. Kai
  82. Lincoln
  83. Aidan
  84. Christopher
  85. Chase
  86. Dominic
  87. Austin
  88. Jonathan
  89. Owen
  90. Hugo
  91. Aaron
  92. Alex
  93. Ryder
  94. Jett
  95. Felix
  96. Koby
  97. Jaxon
  98. Gabriel
  99. Jasper
  100. Braxton

Saturday Celebrity Sibset: The Rockers – Brody Dalle and Josh Homme

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This is yet another celebrity baby from 2011 I didn’t see, so made it a Celebrity Sibset instead.

Brody Dalle is a punk rocker who is originally from Melbourne. Her parents named her Bree, and she picked the unisex name Brody for herself as a teenager. Apparently as a child she was called Breezy Wheezy by her family because she had asthma, which rather ruined the name Bree for her.

She has used the middle names Leslie and Joanna Alice; I’m not sure if either of them are her original middle name/s. She has managed an impressive seven surnames during her life, and it’s unclear what the original surname was. She went by Pucilowski, Mayer and Robinson just as a teenager. Eventually she chose Dalle in reference to Béatrice Dalle, her favourite actress. Béatrice Dalle is best known for the film Betty Blue.

Brody began her career in punk at the age of thirteen, and at sixteen she met Tim Armstrong, the vocalist for punk rock band Rancid at a music festival. They began a relationship, although Tim was more than thirteen years her senior. They married when Brody turned 18, and she moved to Los Angeles with her husband, where she founded the band The Distillers. Brody and Tim divorced six years later.

In 2007, Brody married Josh Homme, lead singer from rock band Queens of the Stone Age, and founded the indie rock band Spinnerette; the couple live in Palm Springs, California.

Josh also has an interesting name – he was named after the town he was born in, Joshua Tree, in the Mojave Desert of California. He pronounces his Norwegian surname to rhyme with Tommy, although the Norwegian pronunciation is to rhyme with puma. He has adopted the pseudonym Carlo von Sexron for some of his work, and his nicknames include King Baby Duck, J. Ho, Joe’s Hoe, and the Ginger Elvis.

Brody and Josh have two children, and as they have enjoyed re-naming themselves so much, it’s interesting to see what names they would choose for their children.

Camille Harley Joan was born in 2006. Camille is named after Josh’s grandmother, and Josh collects motorcycles, which probably explains Harley. Although Joan looks like Brody’s middle name Joanna, it also reminds me of rock queen Joan Jett, who must have had some influence on Dalle herself. However, for all I know it’s another family name.

Orrin Ryder was born in 2011. Rumour has it that just as Camille is named after Josh’s grandma, Orrin is named for his grandfather, but I can’t confirm that. Josh has both his grandmother’s and grandfather’s nicknames tattooed on his knuckles – CAM and CAP – so it does have some symmetry. It’s hard not to connect the name Ryder with Josh’s motorcycle hobby as well.

Being called after a family member seems cosy and non-punk, although being named after Dad’s tattoos and motorbikes gives them a bit more of a rock edge.

I wonder if Camille and Orrin will follow the family tradition of giving new names to themselves, and what names they will choose?

Alessandra and Casimir: Birth Announcements from the Melbourne “Age” (February)

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Girls

Alessandra Jane (Finn, Patrick)

Ann Sally Kathleen

Caitlin Zhen-Xing

Cecilia Ellenora

Elsa Rose (Cleo)

Juliet Emily (Arielle, William)

Lily Grace

Una Rose (Molly)

 

Boys

Alfred Michael “Freddie”

Casimir George (Alexei)

Darcy James (Sam, Lucy, Ben)

Henry John Harley

Hugh Ian

Hugo David William (Sienna)

James Lambert

Solomon De Ren

Coco Lucia and Tate Kees: Birth Announcements from Melbourne’s “Herald Sun” (February)

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Twins and Triplets

Ashtyn Jay and Mya Anastaizya

Mikayla Anne and Sophia Rose (Angelique)

Oliver and Lily

Bailey Matthew, Miley Jade and Tyler Blake

 

Girls

Antonia Francesca (Vincent, Alexander)

Charlie Linda (Ethan)

Clara Elisabeth

Coco Lucia (Jack)

Elodie Beth June

Esther Marlowe (Quinn)

Georgia Hope – surname O’Keefe

Isla Lux (April)

Jacinta Mei

London Grigg (Jett, River, Willow)

Matisse Lila (Mitchell, Austin)

Millian Grace

Pearl Rose

Pippa Niamh (Evie)

Sarahjane Inez (Samantha, Savannah)

Scarlett Ivy

Stevie Jay (Tyra)

Syieve Christina (Jacob, Rhiannon, Imogen, Matilda)

Varli Chance Paige (Zarina, Quaysha, Jensen, Xalise)

 

Boys

Abraham Newman (Scarlett, Oliver) – born on Abraham Lincoln’s birthday

Alexander Hoi Jun (Gabriella)

Andrew Chay

Braeydon Jae Burrall

Charlie Christopher Leo (Oscar)

Clem Douglass (Eleni)

Ethan Jude Walter

Fergus Donald (Audrey)

Hudson Thomas James

Ivan William David

Jed Gordon (Emerson, Darcy)

Julian Nicholas

Lawson Daniel Mervyn (Harrison)

Noah David Andrew

Ronald Jack

Saxon Robert

Soren Johan

Tate Kees (Summer, Grace)

Tex Michael