Where did the baby name Zorita come from in 1950?

Zorita dancing with a snake in the movie "I Married a Savage" (1949)
Zorita (and snake) in “I Married a Savage

The rare name Zorita has only ever popped up in the U.S. baby name data twice. The first time it appeared was 1950:

  • 1952: unlisted
  • 1951: unlisted
  • 1950: 5 baby girls named Zorita [debut]
  • 1949: unlisted
  • 1948: unlisted

Why?

My guess is an American burlesque dancer named Zorita, who was famous for dancing with a snake during her routines.

She performed from the 1930s to the 1950s, but did two things circa 1950 that would have garnered more attention than usual.

  • Starting in late 1949, she could be seen in the sexploitation film I Married a Savage. The trailer tempted viewers to watch “the beautiful Zorita do the secret sacred snake dance!”
  • In mid-1950, Zorita became the featured performer in the “girl show” section of a traveling carnival called World of Mirth. “The show consisted of Zorita dancing with a snake and clips from her movie. It grossed $82,000.”

I don’t think expectant parents were necessarily lining up to see the movie or the carnival act. But I do think that marketing for the film (and perhaps for the carnival) gave the name “Zorita” extra exposure, and that this exposure increased the usage of name just enough for it to debut in the baby name data.

The Miami Herald asked Zorita’s daughter Tawny about her mother’s stage name in 2001. Tawny said, “She told me a lot of stories, but she never told me that one. She liked to sound exotic. All I know is it had a ‘Z’ in it, and you could make it into a snake.” Sure enough, when Zorita signed her name, to the “Z” she added a loop (like the head of a snake) and an extra line (as a tongue).

There’s disagreement over Zorita’s birth name, but many sources from the late ’30s and early ’40s mention that her legal name (at that time) was Ada Brockett.

Do you like the name Zorita? (Do you like it more or less than the similar name Zorina?)

Sources:

Image: Adapted from the I Married a Savage trailer (via the Internet Archive)

Top one-syllable baby names of 2020: Grace, Claire; James, Jack

single tree

Which one-syllable baby names were the most popular in the U.S. in 2020?

I scanned the 2020 U.S. baby name data (both the girl names and the boy names) and found these:

Girl Names

  1. Grace (ranked 28th overall)
  2. Claire (57th)
  3. Quinn (85th)
  4. Jade (97th)
  5. Rose (113th)
  6. Faith (136th)
  7. Reese (144th)
  8. Maeve (173rd)
  9. Sloane (181st)
  10. June (182nd)

Boy Names

  1. James (ranked 6th overall)
  2. Jack (21st)
  3. John (27th)
  4. Luke (31st)
  5. Brooks (91st)
  6. Kai (93rd)
  7. Jace (97th)
  8. Beau (109th)
  9. Chase (123rd)
  10. Cole (131st)

Please note that I intentionally left out names that could go either way (1-syllable or 2-syllable) depending upon one’s regional accent. I don’t think this made a difference on the girls’ side, but on the boys’ side I omitted a number of gray-area names (Owen, Wyatt, Charles, Ryan, Miles, Ian, Gael, Rowan, and Myles) that ranked higher than Cole.

For more names like these, check out the one-syllable girl names and one-syllable boy names posts.

Image: Adapted from 1 Drvo 06241 by Olja Simovic under CC BY-SA 4.0.

What gave the baby name Yendi a boost in 2010?

Yendi Phillipps, 1st runner-up at Miss Universe 2010
Yendi Phillipps

According to the U.S. baby name data, the rare name Yendi saw peak usage in 2010:

  • 2012: 6 baby girls named Yendi
  • 2011: unlisted
  • 2010: 10 baby girls named Yendi
  • 2009: unlisted
  • 2008: 5 baby girls named Yendi

Why?

Because of Jamaican beauty queen Yendi Phillipps.

She placed first runner-up at Miss Universe 2010, which was held in Las Vegas, Nevada, in August of that year.

The Miss Universe pageant doesn’t include a talent competition, but it does feature a national costume competition. Yendi’s costume was inspired by the endangered Jamaican swallowtail, the largest butterfly species in the Western Hemisphere.

What are your thoughts on the name Yendi?

Sources: Yendi Phillipps – Wikipedia, SSA

Image: Screenshot of the TV broadcast of the 59th Miss Universe pageant

[Latest update: Jul. 2024]

Where did the baby name Cresta come from in 1970?

The character Cresta in the movie "Soldier Blue" (1970).
Cresta in “Soldier Blue

The curious names Cresta and Kresta both debuted in the U.S. baby name data in 1970:

  • 1974: 17 baby girls named Cresta + 15 named Kresta
  • 1973: 14 baby girls named Cresta + 10 named Kresta
  • 1972: 26 baby girls named Cresta + 14 named Kresta
  • 1971: 29 baby girls named Cresta + 17 named Kresta
  • 1970: 10 baby girls named Cresta [debut] + 5 named Kresta [debut]
  • 1969: unlisted
  • 1968: unlisted

Where did they come from?

The 1970 movie Soldier Blue, which was set in the Old West and featured a character named Kathy Maribel “Cresta” Lee (played by Candice Bergen).

Cresta was an Easterner who had gone west “to be an Army wife.” While traveling with a military detail en route to meet her army lieutenant fiancé, however, the group was massacred by the Cheyenne. Cresta and the other survivor (a man named Honus, interestingly) now had try to make it to the army camp by themselves.

The movie was based on the book Arrow in the Sun (1969) by Theodore V. Olsen.

Do you like the name Cresta/Kresta?

Sources: