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Tag Archives: celebrity baby names

Famous Name: Adelaide

22 Wednesday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

≈ 15 Comments

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celebrity baby names, famous namesakes, Frankish names, French names, germanic names, honouring, locational names, name history, name meaning, name popularity, nicknames, retro names, royal names, saints names, US name popularity

Tomorrow the city of Adelaide will welcome their Olympic athletes home with a street parade. That’s a good enough excuse as any to cover the name Adelaide, which has been sitting in my Request file for many months now.

Adelaide is the capital of South Australia, and it’s a pleasant coastal city which has been voted the Most Liveable and judged Most Affordable capital city in Australia. It was planned in the 19th century as the capital of a British province of free settlers, and is the only state capital not to have a history of convict settlement – something of which it is still very proud.

Its early history was marked by a commitment to religious freedom and political civil liberties, which led to its nickname of The City of Churches. Despite this moniker, the last census revealed that almost a third of Adelaideans had no religious affiliation at all, making it one of our least religious cities.

From early on, Adelaide attracted many European immigrants escaping religious persecution, most notably from Germany. The Germans brought with them the vine cuttings which were planted to found the famous wineries of the Barossa Valley. After World War II, there were many more immigrants, including Italian, Greek, Dutch, and Polish. The names in the birth notices from Adelaide tell me that South Australians remain very aware of their cultural heritage, because there are always lots of German and Italian baby names.

Adelaide is famous for its many festivals, celebrating music, art, theatre, comedy, sport, food, wine and just about anything else you can think of. When not having a festival, Adelaide tends to be on the sedate side, although quite sophisticated for a small city. If you enjoy somewhere quiet and clean, with good food and wine, attractive beaches, plenty of parkland, lots of outdoor activities and generally friendly people, you will like Adelaide. Please don’t drink the water though; it’s not unsafe but it tastes like it is.

The name Adelaide is from the French form of the Germanic name Adalheidis, meaning “noble kind”. The Frankish nobility were keen to stress their daughters’ high-born pedigree, as it made them more marriageable, and thus names starting with Adel- abound.

There are several Adelaides from history amongst the ruling classes of Europe, including Adelaide of Aquitane, who married Hugh Capet, elected king of France and the founder of one of the most important royal dynasties of that country. Saint Adelaide was the wife of the Holy Roman Emperor Otto, and she ruled the Empire for several years as her grandson’s guardian. (Saint Adelaide’s daughters were Emma and Matilda, which both sound very contemporary).

The name wasn’t particularly common in England until the 19th century, when William IV, then the Duke of Clarence, married Princess Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen, a small state of Germany. Adelaide was less than half William’s age, and had to accept his ten illegitimate children as part of the bargain, but despite this, the couple were devoted to each other, and led a life of domestic harmony.

After William became king and Adelaide queen consort, the name got a huge boost. The English people loved Adelaide – she was dignified, modest, charitable, and gained public sympathy for being unable to produce a surviving heir. However, she was very fond of her niece, who would one day reign as Queen Victoria. Queen Victoria’s first child had Adelaide as one of her middle names, in her aunt’s honour.

It is this Adelaide that the city of Adelaide is named after; the city was founded in 1836, just a few years after Adelaide became queen. The city has never forgotten its royal namesake: there is a bronze statue of Queen Adelaide in the foyer of the Town Hall, and the Queen Adelaide Club provides an exclusive social club for women.

Each year the city celebrates Queen Adelaide’s birthday on August 13, held in the Queen Adelaide Room of the Town Hall. There is a tea party given, and everyone who bears the name Adelaide is invited to attend as an honoured guest. This year, on Queen Adelaide’s 220th birthday, 30 Adelaides came, up from 22 last year; the eldest was in her eighties, and the youngest only 17 days old. Over the past 15 years, more than 50 girls in South Australia have been named Adelaide.

In New South Wales, Adelaide was #132 in the 1900s, and then sank in popularity until it was out of regular use between the 1930s and the 1970s. During the 1980s, it was #792, representing about one Adelaide born each year. During the 1990s, it increased to #447, and continued rising. It peaked in 2010 at #154, and last year suddenly dropped to #232, so it may be losing popularity before reaching its 1900s ranking.

Australian actress Rachel Griffiths and artist Andrew Taylor welcomed a daughter named Adelaide Rose in 2005. As Adelaide Taylor was born in Los Angeles, she became part of a growing trend, because her name joined the US Top 1000 the year she was born. It has continued to rise, and is currently #407. I wonder if beleaguered MP Craig Thomson having a baby girl named Adelaide in 2011 damaged the brand in NSW – it was going so well until last year?

This is a stylish, ladylike name that manages to sound both “old fashioned” and contemporary. It’s never been on the Top 100, and doesn’t seem likely to join it at this stage. You could use Addie as a nickname, in which case it would blend right in with all the Addisons and Madisons, but many would prefer Ada, Adele, Dell, Della, or no nickname at all.

Sad Celebrity Baby News: Paul and Sian Murray

21 Tuesday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

celebrity baby names

Radio host Paul Murray, and his wife Sian, have lost their baby son Leo. Due to complications with the birth, Leo passed away on Sunday after living just 24 hours.

Paul works at 2UE, and it was the task of his colleague and good friend Jason Morrison to pass on the sad news to their listeners. Paul will be off air for as long as he needs, and you may leave messages of sympathy and support on the RadioInfo website or on the 2UE blog.

Our deepest condolences to the Murrays on their tragic loss.

Celebrity Baby News: NRL Babies

16 Thursday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names

Dane Tilse from the Canberra Raiders, and his wife Katie, welcomed their first child on August 13, and have named their daughter Ila Rose. Ila Tilse was born at Calvary Hospital at 6.20 pm, weighing 3.6 kg (7 pounds), and 49 cm long.

Isaac de Gois from the Cronulla Sharks, and his wife, welcomed their daughter Lilah Rose on August 6.

(Picture shows Dane Tilse with his daughter Ila)

Celebrity Baby News: Victoria Samba and Mitch Hoare

16 Thursday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ Comments Off on Celebrity Baby News: Victoria Samba and Mitch Hoare

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celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

Victoria Samba, daughter of racing identity Les Samba, and her husband, Mitch Hoare, welcomed their son Fergus on August 1 (coincidentally, August 1 is also the official birthday for horses). Fergus Hoare joins big sister Hilary, aged 4. Hilary is the daughter of Victoria’s first husband, jockey Danny Nikolic.

Victoria’s father Les Samba was a high-profile trainer of thoroughbred horses with a lifetime in the racing industry; he had been the strapper for Rain Lover when it won the Melbourne Cup in 1969. Last February, Les was gunned down in Melbourne, and his killer has still not been found. However, during the police investigation, corruption in the racing industry, and links with organised crime were uncovered, which may prove pertinent to the case. Victoria Police have offered a $1 million reward for information which leads to the arrest of the person or people involved.

Victoria and Mitch were married a few weeks ago.

Names of Australian Female Olympic Medalists

12 Sunday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Themes and Lists

≈ 11 Comments

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American names, Appellation Mountain, astronomical names, Australian names, celebrity baby names, created names, english names, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, flower names, folklore, French names, Hindi names, idioms, Indian names, Latin names, locational names, middle names, modern names, mythological names, name history, name meaning, name popularity, national symbols, Native American names, nature names, nicknames, plant names, portmanteau names, Roman names, Russian names, Sabine names, saints names, Sanskrit names, scandinavian names, Scottish names, surname names, unisex names, US name popularity, vocabulary names

Chantal (Meek)

Chantal Meek is originally from Britain, and won a bronze medal in 2008 for sprint canoeing. The name Chantal was originally given in honour of Saint Jane Frances de Chantal (her non-saint name was Jeanne-Françoise Frémiot, Baronne de Chantal). Jeanne-Françoise was of the nobility, and married a baron; she devoted herself to prayer and charity, and later in life founded a religious order. Not only kind and sensible, she was known for her great sense of humour. The place name Chantal is from Old Provençal cantal, meaning “stony”, but people often imagine it is from the French word chant, meaning “song”. Chantal was first used as a personal name in France in the 1920s, and was most popular there during the 1940s-60s. The name entered the US Top 100 in 1968, the same year Marie-Chantal Miller was born to American millionaire and socialite, Robert Warren Miller (Marie-Chantal later became Crown Princess of Greece). Chantal (shan-TAHL) has never charted in Australia, with the preference here being for the variant Chantelle (shan-TEL).

Clover (Maitland)

Clover Maitland has won gold twice for hockey, in 1996 and 2000. Although usually thought of as a nature name, Clover was originally from the surname. It was an occupational name given to an official mace-bearer (a mace was called a clavia), or to a timber-worker, with the origin being from the word cleave. This accounts for boys named Clover. The plant of this name plays a role in folklore, for it is said that to find a four-leafed clover is lucky. The shamrock is a clover variety which is one of the symbols of Ireland, and proudly displayed on Saint Patrick’s Day. The word clover ultimately goes back to a Proto-Indo-European word meaning “sticky” – quite apt, as white clover flowers make excellent honey. Clover is also used in farming and gardening to enrich the soil, and so good for stock to eat that we say someone is living in clover if their life is one of ease and prosperity. So many positive things attached to this fresh green plant – another one is that it contains the word love. Clo, Cloey, Clove and Lola could all be used as nicknames.

Maree (Fish)

Maree Fish is a hockey player who won gold at the 1988 Olympics. The name Maree is typically Australasian, and so little known elsewhere that Abby at Appellation Mountain even asked about it, as she was puzzled why so many baby girls in Australian birth announcements had Maree in their names. There are several possibilities. The original pronunciation of Maree was MAH-ree, so it could be an Anglicisation of the Scottish Màiri, which is a form of Mary, and can be pronounced the same way. On the other hand, MAH-ree is how the name Marie was pronounced in England until the early twentieth century, and is also a common Gaelic and Irish pronunciation of the name. There is a Loch Maree in the Scottish Highlands, named after Saint Maree – however, he was a man, and his name is the Anglicised form of Máel Ruba, which roughly means “red haired monk” (sometimes it’s Anglicised as Rufus). These days, Maree is usually pronounced muh-REE, as a variant spelling of Marie. Maree entered the charts in the 1920s and was Top 100 by the 1940s. It peaked in the 1960s at #62, and left the Top 100 the following decade. It hasn’t charted since 2009. Like Marie, it’s much more common as a middle name.

Nova (Peris-Kneebone)

Nova Peris began her sporting career in hockey, becoming the first Indigenous Australian to win an Olympic gold medal when the Australian team won at the 1996 Olympics. She then switched to athletics, and although she won gold twice at the Commonwealth Games as a runner, she never received another Olympic medal. The name Nova is from the Latin word for “new”, and the word nova is well known in astronomy to describe a nuclear explosion in a white dwarf star. This makes it another “star” name. Although a rare name here, it has been on the US Top 1000 since the 1880s, and last year returned at #882, after not being seen there since before World War II. It now seems very usable, with its fashionable O and V sounds – it fits right in with popular girls’ names such as Ava and Eva, and can also be seen as an unusual nature name. It may remind some Australians of the radio station, Nova FM, but I’m unsure whether that would bother anyone.

Rohanee (Cox)

Rohanee Cox is a basketball player with the national women’s team who won silver at the 2008 Olympics. She is the first Indigenous Australian to win an Olympic medal in basketball. She has been awarded many sporting honours, including NAIDOC Sportsperson of the Year in 2010. Rohanee, pronounced ro-HAH-nee, is an Indian girl’s name which is a variant of Rohane, based on Rohana, meaning “sandalwood”. Sandalwood trees are native to southern India, and incense made from the tree is used in Hindu ceremonies, while devotees wear a paste made from it on their bodies, so the name has spiritual connotations. Another person with the name is Rohanee Walters, the sister of actor Brandon Walters, who served as his stand-in during the making of Baz Luhrmann’s Australia. Like Ms Cox, Miss Walters is from Broome in Western Australia, and I think is young enough to have been named after local sports star Rohanee Cox – although I don’t know if that’s what happened.

Shirley (Strickland)

Shirley Strickland is one of our most famous athletes, gaining more Olympic medals than any other Australian woman in track and field. She won silver and two bronze at the 1948 London Olympics, gold and bronze at the 1952 Olympics, and two gold at the Melbourne Olympics in 1956. Shirley is a surname from a common English place name meaning “bright clearing”. It was a rare male name until Charlotte Brontë’s 1848 novel Shirley was published. In the story, the lively young heiress Shirley Keeldar has been given a boy’s name, because her parents had no son to pass the family name on to. The US Top 1000 shows Shirley as a unisex name from the 1880s onwards, with 1957 being the last year it appears as a male name. The name began steadily rising just before World War I, coinciding with the 1908 publication of L.M. Montgomery’s novel, Anne of Green Gables, with its imaginative red-haired heroine, Anne Shirley (in a later book, Anne calls her youngest son Shirley). In Australia, Shirley was in rare use in the 1900s, and skyrocketed in popularity to be #10 for the 1920s. It peaked in the 1930s at #3, and had left the Top 100 by the 1960s. It hasn’t charted since 2009.

Taryn (Woods)

Taryn Woods was a member of the women’s water polo team which won gold a the 2000 Sydney Olympics. Taryn is a name popularised by Hollywood matinee idol, Tyrone Power, and his second wife, Linda Christian. They gave the name to their second daughter in 1953, and the name Taryn first appears on the US Top 1000 in 1955. Her name is presumed to be a feminised form of the name Tyrone, which is the name of an Irish county. Taryn is found in ultra-ultra-rare use before that as a unisex name, and similar-sounding names such as Taren, Terrian, Toreen and Torunn were common in the 1940s and ’50s, so the Powers did seem to be tapping into a mid-century zeitgeist. Many of these names look to be inspired by Scandinavian links to the Norse god of thunder, Thor, or perhaps combinations of names, such as Terri and Karen. Taryn first entered the Australian charts in the 1960s, and peaked in the 1980s, at #230. It hasn’t charted since 2009. The name seems to have been more popular in Australia than anywhere else, although its only tenuous Aussie connection is that Linda Christian was one of Erroll Flynn’s lovers.

Tatiana (Grigorieva)

Tatiana Grigorieva was a national hurdler in Russia, but when she migrated to Australia in 1997 she took up pole vaulting. Within a year of picking up a pole for the first time, she won a medal at an international competition. After winning silver at the 2000 Sydney Olympics, she became a household name, and her blonde good looks made her very marketable. Tatiana is the feminine form of Tatianus, derived from the Roman family name Tatius. The name may be of Sabine origin, and the meaning is unknown. Saint Tatiana is supposed to have been a 3rd century Roman Christian who was martyred for her faith. She was venerated in Orthodox Christianity, and her name has been commonly used in Russia and surrounding areas. Although Tatiana is unusual in Australia, its forms Tania and Tanya both peaked in the 1970s in the Top 100. Last year, NRL star Akuila Uate welcomed a baby girl named Tatianna, and its short form Tiana peaked in the early 2000s.

Virginia (Lee)

Virginia Lee is a rower who won bronze at the 1996 Olympics. The name Virginia is the feminine form of the Roman family Verginius; the meaning may be “bend, turn toward”, but modern writers often spell it Virginius, to make it seem as if it is derived from virgo, Latin for “virgin”. According to legend, Verginia was a beautiful Roman girl murdered by her father to protect her honour. Virginia was the name of the first English colony in North America. In 1584, Sir Walter Raleigh’s expedition to what is now North Carolina brought word of a Native American chief named Wingina. The first Native American leader to meet English settlers, he died by their hand soon after, setting an unhappy precedent for future cultural relations. Queen Elizabeth I called the new colony Virginia in her own honour, due to her status as Virgin Queen; it is thought that Wingina’s name may have helped inspire her choice. The original colony stretched from North Carolina into Canada, but the modern American state of Virginia is of more modest proportions. The first child born in the Americas to English parents was Virginia Dare, named after the colony, and her fate is a mystery, for all the colonists disappeared a few years later. Because of its origins, Virginia has been more popular in the United States than elsewhere. In Australia, it first charted in the 1920s, and peaked in the 1950s at #94 – the decade when Virginia McKenna starred in A Town Like Alice. It hasn’t ranked since the early 2000s.

Wendy (Schaeffer)

Wendy Schaeffer is an equestrian who won gold in eventing at the 1996 Olympics. The early history of the name Wendy is rather murky, and it’s usually suggested that it began as a pet form of Gwendoline or Wanda. Unfortunately for this theory, the first Wendy I can find was born in 1615 in Cambridgeshire, and was male. He may have been named after the Cambridgeshire hamlet of Wendy, meaning “island on the river bend”. In fact, boys named Wendy in 18th century England did tend to come from Cambridgeshire. The earliest woman named Wendy I can find died in Essex, and is estimated to have been born around 1711. Wendy is also a surname which is most commonly found in Essex – as this county is next to Cambridgeshire, could it be inspired by the place name? Leaving aside this mysterious origin, the name’s popularity is due to author J.M. Barrie. He knew a wee lass called Margaret Henley, and she called Barrie “fwendy”, as a childish way of saying “friend”. Margaret died aged five, and Barrie named the heroine of his 1904 play, Peter Pan, Wendy Darling; the novelisation of the play was published in 1911. In Australia, Wendy first entered the charts in the 1920s, and was Top 100 by the following decade. It peaked in the 1950s at #15, and left the Top 100 in the 1980s. It is still in rare use.

(Photo shows Tatiana Grigorieva after winning silver at the Sydney Olympics in 2000)

Celebrity Baby News: Musical Babies

09 Thursday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets, Italian names

Flautist Bridget Bolliger, and her husband Anthony Heinrichs welcomed a son named Luca Raphael on January 31. Luca Heinrichs joins big brother Benjamin, aged 11.

Bridget studied music at the Sydney Conservatorium High School, then continued her studies at the Basel Music Academy in Switzerland. While still a student, she won several awards for music, and two prestigious scholarships. She lived and worked abroad from 1987-2003, and has been Principal Flute with the Gustav Mahler Youth Orchestra, the Schleswig Holstein Festival Orchestra, and guest principal with the European Community Youth Chamber Orchestra. She has also been appointed Principal Flute with the St Gallen Symphony Orchestra and the Sao Paulo Symphony Orchestra, and played Principal Flute with the Basel Symphony Orchestra, The Zurich Opera Orchestra, the Zurich Chamber Orchestra, the Australian Opera and Ballet Orchestra and the Queensland Orchestra. She has performed as a soloist and been recorded for radio and television throughout Europe, Brazil, and Australia. Bridget currently teaches at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music and freelances with Australian orchestras. She is a founding member of the New Sydney Wind Quintet, and the flute and guitar duo, Flutarre. She is also the founder and Artistic Director of the Sydney Chamber Music Festival, and last year was appointed Music Director of the Manly Music Club.

Anthony has been playing trumpet since he was ten, and at the age of 14 became a member of the West Australian Youth Orchestra. He studied at the West Australian Conservatorium of Music, and then later in Canberra, Japan, and Germany. He worked regularly with the West Australian Symphony Orchestra and has been Principal Trumpet with the Australian Youth Orchestra, Camerata Australia, the Canberra Symphony Orchestra, and the Pacific Music Festival, and has performed with the Frankfurt and Saarbrucken Radio Symphony Orchestras. He has been Principal Cornet with the Australian Opera and Ballet Orchestra. He has taught in Sydney and Newcastle, and has been with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra since 1995.

Another city, another state:

Cellist Tim Nankervis, and his wife Jacqui, welcomed a daughter named Mietta Susan on February 2.

Tim has been a cellist with Melbourne’s Seraphim Trio since 1994. They won a prize at the 2001 Australian National Chamber Music Competition, and since then have performed internationally and around Australia. The trio is regularly broadcast on ABC Classic FM.

Name tips from classical musicians: Stylish and Italian, with fashionable middle names.

Celebrity Baby News: Toni Pearen and Will Osmond

06 Monday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

Former TV presenter Toni Pearen, and her husband Will Osmond, recently welcomed a daughter named Ever – the choice of name was apparently inspired by a friend. Ever Osmond joins big brother Lucky, aged 2.

Toni started out in television on soap E-Street, and then pursued a career in music, where she had two Top 10 hits. After a brief stint on soapie Home and Away, she moved to Los Angeles in 1995, where she worked as an actor, singer and songwriter, and guest-starred on several television shows. She returned to Australia in 2002, and became the host of Australia’s Funniest Home Videos. Since being replaced by Shelley Craft in 2008, she has had some small acting roles, and appeared on Dancing with the Stars.

Will is a former restaurateur who ran a fashionable cafe-bar called Will and Toby’s with his younger brother for several years. Since the business folded, he has become a landscape gardener. Will and Toni were married in 2007, on Will’s parents’ country property.

Predictably, the press have been quick to label Ever a “weird baby name”, although the Daily Telegraph did get an un-named expert to explain that it was on trend, and pointed out that Milla Jovovich has a daughter named Ever, and Alanis Morissette has a son of the same name.

Saturday Celebrity Sibsets: Children of Olympic Gold Medalists

04 Saturday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Sibsets in the News

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

As the London Olympics are still on, the Celebrity Sibsets for this week had to be children of Olympians. These are sibsets of those Australian Olympians who have won a gold medal at past Olympic Games, and still have young children.

Alyson Annan – hockey (marital partner: Carole Thate)

Sam Henk Brian (2007) and Cooper (2008)

Lauren Burns – taekwondo (husband: Nathan Muller)

Mac Banjo (2009) and Piper (2010)

Jamie Dwyer – hockey (wife: Leoni Dwyer)

Julian (2008) and Taj (2010)

Grant Hackett – swimming (estranged wife: Candice Alley)

Jagger Emilio and Charlize Alley (twins 2009)

Chantelle Newbery – diving (husband Robert Newbery)

Jet (2002) and Ryder (2006)

Susie O’Neill – swimming (husband Cliff Fairley)

Alix (2004) and William (2006)

Kieran Perkins – swimming (estranged wife: Symantha Perkins)

Georgia (1997), Harry (1998) and Charlie (female – 2005)

Adam Pine – swimming (wife: Sasha Pine)

Maxmilian (2002), Buster (2004) and Xander Xavier Adam (2010)

Petria Thomas – swimming (husband: Julian Jones)

Aiden (2006) and Zara (2009)

Todd Woodbridge – tennis (wife: Natasha Woodbridge)

Zara Rose (2000) and Beau Andrew (2002)

(Photo shows Jamie Dwyer with his family; Jamie is competing at the London Olympics, where he has set an Australian Olympic goals record)

Celebrity Baby News: Todd Goldstein and Kirsty Hope

04 Saturday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

AFL footballer Todd Goldstein, and his partner Kirsty Hope, welcomed a daughter named Mackenzie last week. Mackenzie Goldstein joins big sister Olivia, aged 18 months.

Todd plays for the North Melbourne Kangaroos, and has been with them since 2008. Being very tall, Todd began as a basketball player, but switched to football in 2006.

Celebrity Baby News: Anthony and Anita Carbines

02 Thursday Aug 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 1 Comment

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celebrity baby names

State MP Anthony Carbines, and his wife Anita, welcomed a daughter named Ava Lucy on May 24. Ava Carbines was born at St Vincent’s Private Hospital in Melbourne.

Anthony represents the seat of Ivanhoe in Melbourne’s eastern suburbs for the Australian Labor Party, and has done so since 2010. Before his election, he was a journalist with the Geelong Advertiser, and then chief-of-staff to Labor MP and Minister for Education Bronwyn Pike. His stepmother is Elaine Carbines, who represented Geelong for the Australian Labor Party from 1999-2006.

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