
As reported in the not always reliable Star magazine, Nicole Richie, mother of Harlow Winter Kate, has at the top of her list of names for her baby-to-be Baron, inspired by Donald Trump’s little Barron. (Her other two published possibilities being Kypher and Martavious, about which I’ll restrain my comments). This is the latest evidence of a disturbing trendlet among celebs–Hollywood royalty taking their status literally and bestowing noble titles on their offspring.
So who are these little peers and peeresses of the realm?
At the top of the ranks would be King. Discounting Kingston Rossdale, whose nickname might be King, there is the son of rapper Jayceon (The Game) Taylor. Since The Game’s other nicknames include The California King and King of the West, what could be more logical than to have named his second son King Justice?
Next in line to the throne would be a Prince. Michael Jackson liked the idea of starting a royal line so much that he named both his sons Prince Michael Jackson–I born in 1997 and II (aka Blanket) in 2002. Not to be outdone, British model Katie Price (aka Jordan) and pop star husband Peter Andre called their little princess Princess (”Princess because she is our little princess”) Tiaamii, with Mum expressing ing her intention of commemorating the regal birth by getting a Princess and crown tattoo on her neck.
Both Diane Keaton and Justine Bateman have sons named Duke, but somehow this name doesn’t project the same air of entitlement or pretension to royalty the others do, probably because Duke has long been used as a laid-back nickname name, and because it was so much associated with anything-but-aristocratic John Wayne–who got his nickname from the family dog that used to follow him around: the dog was known as “Big Duke” and young Marion Morrison as “Little Duke.”
A couple of celebs have used variations on the title Marquis. Rapper 50 Cent chose the Marquise version; David Caruso used Marquez–the surname of his son’s mother.
Though the British don’t have the rank of Count (it’s equivalent to an earl, and somehow My Name is Earl doesn’t have much of a royal ring)–show biz does. Never one to hide his light under a bushel, Danny Bonaduce has a son named Count Dante Jean-Michel Valentine and a daughter called Countess Isabella Michaela.
How much have other parents been picking up on this noble-name trend? Well, King, Prince, Princess, Baron, and three different spellings of Marquis are all on the current popularity list, but pretty near the bottom, each with under 500 anointed babies nationwide. And, personally–it would be fine with me if they didn’t rise any higher.
Tags: 50 Cent, Barron Trump, celebrity babies, celebrity baby names, David Caruso, Diane Keaton, Donald Trump, Duke, John Wayne, Jordan, Michael Jackson, Nicole Richie, Princess Tiaamii, royal baby names, royal names
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June 15th, 2009 at 9:16 am
And then there’s Contessa Brewer, 35-year-old news anchor for MSNBC. Not a celebrity baby, but now a semi-celebrity with a royal name. I wonder how long it will be before we see “Contessa” on the SSA’s Top 1,000 baby names list?
“And, personally–it would be fine with me if they didn’t rise any higher.”
Hahaha! Reminds me of the time Grace Slick (of Jefferson Airplane) joked about naming her daughter “god”: “We spell it with a small ‘g’ because we want her to be humble.”
Of course she didn’t really name the baby “god” — she named her “China.” Whether she was going for East Asia’s biggest county or merely expressing a fondness for her dinnerware, I have no idea.
– Nephele