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Tag Archives: celebrity baby names

Celebrity Baby News: Andrew and Rayne Embley

04 Saturday Jun 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names

AFL star Andrew Embley, who plays for the West Coast Eagles, and his wife Rayne, welcome their first son, Lux Edward. Lux Embley was born 7.30 pm last night, June 3, at Perth’s St John of God hospital, and weighed 7 lb 6 oz (3.35 kg).

Lux joins big sister Autumn Claire, who will turn two in September. Readers may remember that Autumn Claire has already appeared in this blog, as a celebrity baby name in the Waltzing with … Autumn entry.

Naming Lux did cause the Embleys some disagreement; Andrew favoured the name Eddie, but Rayne was attracted to the idea of a three-letter name that couldn’t be shortened into a nickname, and fell in love with the name Lux. Eventually they compromised, with Andrew’s choice being relegated to the middle name position. So no Eddie Embley.

From the point of view Australian Rules fans, Lux’s timely arrival means that Andrew will be free to play against the Gold Coast Suns tomorrow.

Celebrity Baby News: Michael Gordon and Terriceta Rose

30 Monday May 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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Penrith Panthers star, Michael Gordon, and his partner, Terriceta Rose, welcomed their son Cruz a few weeks ago. Michael was there for the birth, but had to leave for an away game against the New Zealand Warriors, and then the City vs Country Origin Match on May 6.

Michael has recently had a serious knee injury which means that he cannot play rugby league for the rest of the season, and missed out on the chance to be considered for State of Origin. He underwent a knee reconstruction on May 23.

One positive thing for Michael about his injury is that it has given him a chance to bond with Cruz.

”It’s a blessing in disguise – I get a lot more time with him,” Michael said. ”I’ve got someone to sit on the couch with me all day.

”He’s been a really good baby – born a touch under eight pounds [3.6 kilograms]. He eats and sleeps really good – he hasn’t been keeping us up much.”

Michael plans to be playing for Penrith again in the 2012 season.

Celebrity Baby News: Steve Jacobs and Rose Kelly

26 Thursday May 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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It’s clearly weather presenter baby season this May, because on Wednesday May 25, Channel 9’s Today show weather presenter, Steve Jacobs, and his wife Rose Kelly, a presenter on The Weather Channel, welcomed a baby girl called Isabella Anthonette.

He explained to Today‘s Georgie Gardner that they chose the name Isabella because when they heard it, both their hearts “melted”, and they knew it was the perfect name for her. They interpret the name as meaning “beautiful”. The middle name is the Dutch form of Antoinette, and it was Steve’s mother’s name; he became teary-eyed thinking about his daughter carrying on her grandmother’s name. According to the text message he sent from the hospital, Isabella’s nickname will be Issy.

Isabella Jacobs was born at Prince of Wales Hospital; she weighed 2.24 kg, and was 49 cm long. Steve and Rose were married in May last year.

You can watch a video of the Steve, Rose and Isabella on the Today show by clicking here.

Celebrity Baby News: Grant Denyer and Cheryl Rogers

24 Tuesday May 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names

Sunrise weather presenter and motor racing driver Grant Denyer, and his wife, TV producer Cheryl Rogers, welcomed their first baby on Saturday May 7, the day before Mother’s Day, at 3.17 am at Sydney’s Prince of Wales private hospital.

Their daughter’s name is Sailor Shelley, and they were fortunate enough to have very little difficulty choosing it. Cheryl has wanted a daughter called Sailor ever since she was a teenager, when American model Christie Brinkley had a baby girl called Sailor Lee in 1998. Meanwhile, Grant has been a fan of the name Sailor since he met a little girl with that name on Hamilton Island some years ago.

“Nobody I’d ever known, except Grant, had ever liked that name or even heard of it before. So the minute she was born, we knew what to call her,” says Cheryl.

It just goes to show that your teenage baby name dreams can come true, if you are lucky enough to marry the right man!

Sailor’s middle name is Shelley after Cheryl’s mother, and after the couple’s good friend, TV host Shelley Craft.

Sailor Shelley Denyer weighed 3.5 kg and was 50 cm long at her birth, and she was born with strawberry blonde hair.

The full story and pictures can be found in the May 30 issue of New Idea magazine.

Sydney Suburbs That Could Be Used as Boy’s Names

22 Sunday May 2011

Posted by A.O. in Name Themes and Lists

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Anglo-Saxon names, aristocratic titles, Australian Aboriginal names, birth notices, British names, celebrity baby names, english names, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, French names, Gaelic names, honouring, Irish names, literary names, locational names, modern classics, name history, name meaning, name popularity, names of businesses, nicknames, Old English names, Old Norse names, Old Welsh names, popular culture, saints names, Scottish names, surname names, unisex names, US name popularity, vocabulary names

KyleBay

This blog post was first published on May 22 2011, and substantially revised and updated on May 14 2015.

Auburn
Auburn is in Sydney’s western suburbs. The commercial district contains many Middle Eastern and Asian shops and restaurants, and is a focal point for migrant groups. Auburn has the oldest Hindu temple in Australia, which opened in 1977, and one of its busiest mosques – the Auburn Gallipoli Mosque, built by the Turkish community in honour of the Gallipoli conflict of 1915. Auburn is named after an Irish village in Oliver Goldsmith’s poem The Deserted Village; the first line of the poem is, Sweet Auburn, loveliest village of the plain. Auburn was a tiny place near Athlone in Westmeath, and doesn’t seem to exist any more – perhaps it was too deserted. Auburn simply means “red-brown”, and usually refers to dark red hair colours. Auburn has been used as a personal name since the 17th century, more often given to boys. It sounds similar to Aubrey, Aubin, and Auberon, and seems quite distinguished, while its literary ancestor gives it a sentimental air.

Bexley
Bexley is a suburb in Sydney’s south, in the St George area. It was originally a land grant to Thomas Sylvester in the 1810s, who sold it to James Chandler in 1822. Lydham Hall, the oldest residence in the area, was part of the 1822 sale. Chandler got fed up with the bushrangers, escaped convicts and other undesirables who infested his personal paradise, and sold it to Charles Tindell. By 1856 Tindell was subdividing the land into lots for homes, and by the late 19th century, Bexley was a thriving town. Its best days are behind it, for this suburb has been on the decline since the 1980s. James Chandler named it Bexley after his birthplace in London; the name comes from the Old English, meaning “box tree meadow”. In uncommon use as a personal name since the 16th century, mostly for boys, Bexley has the fashionable X-factor.

Camden
Camden is a historic town in the Macarthur Region, in the far south of Sydney. It’s pretty and semi-rural with a “gentleman farmer” atmosphere. The Camden area originally belonged to the Gandangara people; European explorers first arrived in 1795. In 1805, Governor King rather begrudgingly gave 5000 acres to John Macarthur, who had been promised land by Secretary of State, Lord Camden. (The descendants of John Macarthur still live in their ancestral home at Camden Park). Macarthur’s wool industry was so successful, a town was necessary in order to support it. Founded in 1840, by the 1880s it was a thriving concern. Camden was named after its sponsor, Lord Camden – his title is from a Gloucestershire place name meaning either “enclosed valley” or “valley of encampments” in Old English. In use since the 17th century, Camden sounds like familiar choices such as Cameron and Caden, while retaining a hint of its aristocratic past. It is in the Top 100 in the US, and I am seeing it more frequently in birth notices here.

Carlton
Carlton is the next suburb to Bexley. It is most famous for being the home of the St George Illawarra Dragons National Rugby League team. Carlton was originally heavily timbered, and given as a land grant to Captain John Towson in 1808. When the railway opened in 1884, the land was subdivided and people began moving to the area. Carlton is named after a suburb of Nottingham; I’m not sure why, but assume that it was Captain Towson’s birthplace. The place name Charlton is very common in the UK, and is a linguistic mix of Anglo-Saxon and Old Norse meaning “settlement of free men”. In use since the 17th century, this is a spin on classic Charles, and a variant of Charlton, that I have seen a bit of lately. Like popular Cooper, it is the name of an Australian brewery.

Colebee
Colebee is a fairly new suburb in Sydney’s far west. It is named after an Aboriginal guide, the son of a tribal chief, who assisted William Cox when he surveyed the land across the Blue Mountains. Colebee also tried to bring a peaceful resolution to the years of conflict that existed between Aborigines and white settlers in the area. For his efforts as a geographer and diplomat, he received the first grant of land that the British made to an indigenous person. He received 30 acres on the South Creek; an area which would later become known as Blacktown, and the location of the suburb of Colebee. The meaning of Colebee is not certain, but I have read a theory that it came from the local word for sea eagle (gulbi). Europeans were struck by the fact it sounded exactly like the English name Colby. If you are considering the name Colby, this spelling not only gives the nickname Cole, but is an important part of Sydney’s history.

Kyle
Kyle Bay is a tiny picturesque suburb in Sydney’s south, in the St George area, and takes its name from the bay on the north shore of the Georges River. It is named after local shipbuilder Robert Kyle, who was granted land here in 1853. Kyle is a Scottish surname from the district of Kyle in Ayrshire. The name is from a common place name, usually translated as from the Gaelic word caol, meaning “narrows, channel, strait”. As there are no channels or straits in this district, the name may come instead from the legendary British king Coel Hen (“Coel the Old”), otherwise known as Old King Cole. His name is possibly from the Old Welsh coel, meaning “belief, omen”. In use as a personal name since the 18th century at least, it was originally given to both sexes in its native Scotland, but is now considered to be a male name. Kyle first charted in the 1960s, debuting at #233; its use seems to be heavily influenced by the female name Kylie, which was popular in that decade. Rising swiftly, Kyle was a Top 100 name by 1980, peaked at #27 in 1998, and left the Top 100 in 2006 – the year after obnoxious shock jock Kyle Sandilands became a judge on Australian Idol. It’s now around the 200s, so it’s a modern classic still in reasonable use.

Miller
Miller is a south-west suburb in the Liverpool area. It was part of the Green Valley Housing Estate built in the 1960s, and the suburb was established in 1965. It is named after Peter Miller, an Irish immigrant who was one of the first settlers in the Green Valley area. His surname of Miller is an occupational one, indicating the bearer worked at or managed a corn mill. In use as a first name since at least the 16th century, it has mostly been given to boys, although I have occasionally seen it given to girls because it is a homophone of the popular girls’ name Milla. Miller is around the mid-200s for boys, so not an unusual choice as a name, although not common either, meaning it might very well hit that sweet spot between “too strange” and “too popular”.

Nelson
Nelson is a suburb in the north-west of Sydney, in the affluent Hills District. Governor William Bligh received a land grant in this area, and the suburb is named after Admiral Horatio Nelson, as Bligh served under his command during the Battle of Copenhagen in 1801. Just in case he hadn’t made it clear enough how much he admired Nelson, he called his property Copenhagen Farm in his further honour. Either Nelson had really impressed him, or he was a total crawler. The surname Nelson means “son of Neil” – Neil being from a Gaelic name which may mean either “champion” or “cloud”. It has been in use as a name for boys since at least the 16th century, but Horatio Nelson helped give the name a boost in the 19th. World leader Nelson Mandela and philanthropist Nelson Rockefeller give this heroic name a lot of clout.

Oran
Oran Park is a suburb of Camden, once the colonial estate of John Douglas Campbell, and for many years the home of the Oran Park Raceway, which regularly hosted major motorsport events. Since 2011 it has been developed for residential housing. Oran Park is named after the village of Oran in Scotland; its name comes from the Scottish Gaelic word for “song”. Oran is also an Anglicised form of the Irish boys’ name Odhran, meaning “sallow, pale green”. Saint Odhran was a follower of St Columba, associated with the island of Iona. There is a strange legend which says he willingly allowed himself to be sacrificed by being buried alive, in what sounds like a pagan ceremony to ensure a chapel could be built, and then popped his head out to tell everyone there was no heaven or hell! St Columba hastily covered Odhran more securely in earth before he gave any more alarming information about the afterlife, or lack thereof. Said like Orange without the ge (OR-an), this attractive Scottish or Irish heritage choice may appeal to nostalgic motorsport fans.

Richmond
Richmond is a historic town to the north-west of Sydney, on the Hawkesbury River flats near the foot of the Blue Mountains. The Darug people lived in this area when Europeans arrived in 1788; in 1789 it was explored by the British. The first settlers came to live here in 1794, and by 1799 it was providing half the grain produced in the colony. Because of its long history, Richmond has many heritage-listed buildings, and the University of Western Sydney dates back to 1891. Richmond was named by Governor Phillip, in honour of Charles Lennox, the Duke of Richmond, who was Master General of Ordance in the British government. His title comes from a town in Yorkshire, which was named after the town of Richemont in Normandy; its name simply means “rich hill”. Similar to both Richard and Edmond, this name has a casually expensive feel, and works well in the middle position.

POLL RESULTS
People’s favourite names were Miller, Camden and Nelson, and their least favourites were Colebee, Kyle and Carlton.

(Photo is of the waterfront at Kyle Bay)

Celebrity Baby News: Paul and Anne Gallen

16 Monday May 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names

Another NRL baby was born last week. Cronulla Sharks Captain, Paul Gallen, and his fiancée Anne, welcomed a baby boy on May 10. Their son’s name is Kody, and he weighed 9.5 lb at his birth. Paul made no secret of the fact that he was hoping for a boy, and reportedly got pretty emotional when Kody arrived, yelling “It’s a boy! It’s a boy!”. Kody joins big sister Charly (aged 2).

It’s been an amazing time for Paul Gallen. He made Man of the Match in the Australia vs New Zealand ANZAC Test Match on May 6 despite a painful calf injury. His son was born the following Tuesday night, and on Wednesday he fronted up to training as usual. Yesterday the Sharks managed an upset win against the Sydney Roosters, and Gallen was Man of the Match, even though injured. Last night he was the announced as the Skipper of the NSW Blues for State of Origin, starting May 25. He first debuted for Origin in 2006.

(Picture shows Anne, Paul and Charly).

Celebrity Baby News: Todd and Sally Lowrie

14 Saturday May 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names

National Rugby League player for Melbourne Storm, Todd Lowrie, and his wife Sally, welcomed their first child on May 11 – a boy named Sonny.

There have been several men named Sonny in NRL, including Sonny Fai, Sonny Tuigamala, and Sonny Bill Williams. It’s also a celebrity baby name, since pop singer Noel Gallagher from Oasis called his son Sonny last year.

Some fans have pointed out that it sounds similar to Darren Lockyer’s son, Sunny James, born April 2010. And one wag pointed out the supposed irony of someone called “Sonny” being associated with a team called “the Storm”.

I’ve seen a few babies called Sonny lately, so this may be a name to watch.

Sonny Lowrie’s birth and name was announced on the Melbourne Storm’s Facebook page.

(Picture shows Todd Lowrie playing for Melbourne Storm; he’s the one holding the ball).

Celebrity Baby News: Peter and Autumn Phillips

09 Monday May 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names, royal baby names

Another royal christening took place on Saturday April 23. The Queen’s first great-grandchild was born on December 29 2010 to Peter Phillips, son of Princess Anne, and his Canadian-born wife, Autumn Phillips.

The names of royal babies are not usually made known to the public until they are christened, but at a church service on January 2 2011, the rector welcomed Peter and Autumn Phillips and their daughter Savannah, and offered a prayer for them.

Savannah Phillips’ christening was held at the Church of the Holy Cross at Avening in Gloucestershire, near the home of Princess Anne. Baby Savannah is 12th in line to the throne.

Savannah isn’t a common name in the United Kingdom, and is unique to the royal family. It is, however, a Top 100 name in the United States and in Canada, the land of Autumn Phillips’ birth. Perhaps now this transatlantic name will become more popular in Britain. It’s a Top 100 name in Australia too, so we might have got a jump on this newly-royal name.

UPDATE: Savannah’s full name is Savannah Anne Kathleen – her middle names are after both her grandmothers.

Prince Vincent and Princess Josephine: Twins for Princess Mary and Prince Frederik of Denmark, a brother and sister for Prince Christian and Princess Isabella

08 Sunday May 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby Names

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celebrity baby names, Danish names, French names, germanic names, Greek names, Greenlandic names, honouring, Latin names, royal baby names

We are still recovering from the royal wedding of Prince William to Catherine Middleton (now the Duchess of Cambridge), but it only seems a few years since Australia had the excitement of seeing Mary Elizabeth Donaldson from Hobart marry Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark. I don’t think we’ve got over the thrill of that yet, and the birth of the royal twins this year has been greeted with great interest and enthusiasm.

The unlikely relationship began on September 16 2000, when Frederik was visiting Sydney with the Danish sailing team during the Summer Olympics. He and Mary met at the Slip Inn Bar, where he was enjoying a casual beer and pizza night with his royal cousins; Mary was one of the locals who had been invited to join the party through friends of friends. There must have been something about Mary, because Prince Frederik introduced himself to her at once, and they immediately bonded over sport and horses.

When the media eventually learned of this first meeting, they played up the “prince meets commoner” angle to the hilt, and the fact that the Crown Prince had hit on someone working in real estate down the pub just seemed so beautifully down-to-earth. The media made it sound as if any attractive girl with an office job and a bit of luck could become royalty. The Slip Inn now advertises itself as being fit for royalty, and apparently is still popular with mid-twenties semi-sophisticates who hang around the bar sipping cocktails in slightly desperate hopes of meeting a prince of their own. It seems unlikely that lightning will strike twice though.

Mary and Frederik were able to keep their long-distance relationship secret for over a year, until the Danish press named her as the prince’s girlfriend in November 2001. The following month, Mary moved to Paris where she was able to visit Frederik, and in 2002 she went to live in Denmark permanently. During their courtship, the women’s magazines were bristling with excitement at the prospect of an Australian-born Danish princess, and when the couple became officially engaged in October 2003, they went into hyperdrive. It all culminated in the glorious royal wedding on May 14 2004, upon which the magazines exploded in a paroxysm of frenzied delirium and the Australian public went slightly ga-ga. It was seen as a modern-day fairytale – a simple Tasmanian girl meeting her European Prince Charming and moving into her own palace.

After the thrill of the wedding, there were royal children to look forward to. Mary and Frederik obliged by producing first Prince Christian Valdemar Henri John on October 15 2005, and then Princess Isabella Henrietta Ingrid Margrethe on April 21 2007. Christian of course is Frederik’s heir, while Isabella was the first princess to be born in the Danish royal family since 1946.

In August 2010, it was announced that Mary was pregnant with twins, and on January 8 2011, she gave birth to a baby boy at 10:30 am, and then a girl 26 minutes later. By tradition, the names of royal babies are not made public until their christening ceremony, so we all had a few months to speculate what the names might be. As they were born on Elvis Presley’s birthday, Prince Frederik joked that the boy would be called Elvis, but did suggest that they might slip an Australian name in there somewhere.

Guessing the royal baby names became a national idle pastime for both countries, and some suggestions were Banjo and Matilda, Frederik and Marie, Christopher and Mathilda, and William and Mathilde. A Danish poll found Sophie, Adelaide, Caroline, Louise, Charlotte, Astrid and Alexandrine were popular choices for the baby princess, and Magnus, Erik, Harald, Sven, Knud, Axel and Christoffer for the little prince. Australians tended to make silly suggestions like Shane and Kylie, or Serenity and Grayson (not all of them were joking, I’m afraid).

At last the twins’ christening day arrived on April 14 and the long wait was over. It was revealed that Frederik and Mary’s twin son was called Prince Vincent Frederik Minik Alexander, and their twin daughter Princess Josephine Sophia Ivalo Mathilda. It seems that all the guesses that Matilda/Mathilda/Mathilde would be included were on the money, Sophia was much like the Dane’s popular choice Sophie, Alexandrine turned out to be Alexander instead, and Frederik being included was a bit of a no-brainer.

Vincent was an unusual choice, and came as a surprise to both Danes and Australians, as it is considered a rather old-fashioned name in both countries (I’m sure that will change now). Frederik after his father is a royal custom and was to be expected. The interesting name Minik is North Greenlandic, and honours the country of Greenland as part of the Kingdom of Denmark. I have seen Minik translated as “blubber”, “earwax” and “oil used for sealing skin boats”, but Professor Minik Rosing, who attended the christening, gives an alternative definition of “silent snowfall”. That is a much more attractive meaning, and very appropriate for a baby born in mid-winter. The name is pronounced meen-EEK. Alexander is a popular name in both Denmark and Australia, and has been used in the royal family, and by Mary’s family as well – Alexander is the name of her nephew.

Princess Josephine shares her name with one of her godmothers, an Australian friend of Mary’s called Josephine Rechner. However, I am unable to confirm whether Princess Josephine was named in her honour, or whether it is simply a coincidence. Sophia is another popular name, and has been used in the Danish royal family. Ivalo is a North Greenlandic name which means “tendon”, “thread” or “sinew”; it is pronounced EE-vah-lo. Mathilda has been used in the Danish royal family, and is a nod to Mary’s origins – the Australian name we were promised by Frederik.

From polling and surveying conducted online, the majority of people were approving of Vincent and Josephine as a twinset, with most liking the name Josephine more than the name Vincent. Nearly everyone agreed that they sounded great with siblings Christian and Isabella. People have generally been intrigued by the Greenlandic names, and Danish royal watchers have expressed satisfaction at their inclusion. They are two beautiful and carefully chosen royal names for the Danish royal family, which seem to have come as a pleasant surprise to everyone.

Congratulations to the Crown Prince and Princess on their twins, and happy Mother’s Day to all mothers, everywhere! Whether a royal or a commoner, I hope all mothers are treated like a princess today.

NOTES: Translations of Ivalo and Minik from Wikipedia and Behind the Name; Professor Rosing’s definition of Minik was reported in the Danish press.

If you would like to watch the royal twins being christened, you can see it here:

Celebrity Baby News: Ed Phillips and Jaynie Seal

07 Saturday May 2011

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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Roving reporter for morning show The Circle, Ed Phillips, and his wife, Channel 9 weather presenter Jaynie Seal, welcomed a baby son called Remy Raymond Phillips on May 3. Remy was 51 cm long and weighed 3.5 kg. Remy joins big brother Hayden William (age 3).

(Picture shows Ed, Jaynie and Hayden).

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