How popular is the baby name Suzanne in the United States right now? How popular was it historically? Use the popularity graph and data table below to find out! Plus, see all the blog posts that mention the name Suzanne.

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Popularity of the baby name Suzanne


Posts that mention the name Suzanne

Starlet names from the early 1900s

WAMPAS baby stars 1928

Ever heard of the WAMPAS Baby Stars?

They were young actresses on the cusp of movie stardom back in the 1920s and 1930s.

About 13 Baby Stars were selected by the Western Association of Motion Picture Advertisers every year from 1922 to 1934 (minus 1930 and 1933).

Some of those young women did indeed achieve stardom. Among the Baby Stars were Clara Bow (’24), Mary Astor (’26), Joan Crawford (’26), Fay Wray (’26) and Ginger Rogers (’32).

I thought the names of the Baby Stars — the oldest of whom were born in the final years of the 1800s, the youngest of whom were born in the mid-1910s — would make an interesting set. But I wanted birth names, not stage names, so I tracked down as many birth names as I could. Here’s the result, sorted by frequency (i.e., seven women were named Dorothy).

  • 7: Dorothy
  • 6: Helen
  • 4: Elizabeth
  • 3: Frances, Ruth, Virginia
  • 2: Anita, Ann, Barbara, Betty, Clara, Doris, Dorothea, Eleanor, Evelyn, Gladys, Gwendolyn, Hazel, Jacqueline, Katherine, Laura, Louise, Lucille, Margaret, Maria, Marian, Marie, Marion, Mary, Patricia, Violet
  • 1: Adamae, Alberta, Alma, Anne, Audrey, Augusta, Blanche, Carmelita, Caryl, Constance, Derelys, Dolores, Duane, Edna, Eleanor, Ena, Enriqueta, Ethel, Ethlyne, Evalyn, Flora, Gisela, Gloria, Gretchen, Hattie, Helene, Ina, Ingeborg, Jacquiline, Jean, Joan, Jobyna, Josephine, Juanita, Julanne, Kathleen, Kathryn, Kitty, Launa, Laurette, Lena, Lenore, Lilian, Lola, Lu Ann, Lucile, Madeline, Marceline, Martha, Mildred, Myrna, Natalia, Natalie, Nellie, Neoma, Olive, Olivia, Patsy, Rita, Rochelle, Rose, Sally, Suzanne, Sidney, Toshia, Vera, Vina

And here are the leftover stage names:

  • 5: Sally
  • 4: Mary
  • 3: Joan, June
  • 2: Betty, Jean, Judith, Pauline
  • 1: Alice, Bessie, Boots, Claire, Colleen, Dolores, Dorothy, Elinor, Evelyn, Fay, Frances, Gigi, Ginger, Gladys, Gloria, Gwen, Iris, Janet, Joyce, Julie, Karen, Kathleen, Lila, Lina, Lois, Lona, Loretta, Lucille, Lupe, Marian, Molly, Mona, Natalie, Patricia, Sue

(Often stage names were the real-life middle names of these women.)

Finally, a few interesting details:

  • “Derelys” was Derelys Perdue, whose first name at birth was actually Geraldine. I’m not sure how she came up with her stage name, but, in March of 1923, her film studio (FBO) tried to re-rename her “Ann.” (They’d sponsored a name contest in a magazine called Film Fun. The winner got $50.) Derelys brought an injunction against the studio in April to prevent the name change from happening, and the story ended up in the newspapers. This extra visibility is likely what boosted the name Derelys into the U.S. baby name data for the first and only time in 1924.
  • “Jobyna” was Jobyna Ralston, who was named for actress Jobyna Howland, daughter of a man named Joby Howland. The name Jobyna debuted in the U.S. baby name data in 1927.
  • “Sidney” was Sidney Fox, a female who was given the name Sidney long before the name (in particular, the spelling Sydney) became trendy for baby girls.

Which of all the names listed above do you like best? Why?

Sources:

Baby girl gets 49 names: Princess India Rosa…

This baby didn’t get 139 names, but 49 is still excessive, don’t you think?

Diana and Arthur Martello of New Brighton, Pennsylvania, had a baby girl in May of 1989 and gave her 49 names. (Initially it was just 43, but they added 6 more a few weeks later.)

Here are all 49 names:

Princess India Rosa Kathleen Pearla Meshelle Suzanne Luchianna Irena Iris Veronica Donna Holly Robin Concha Kristian Tonya Elizabeth Joana Magali Lavinia Ruth Sandy Lori Appolonia Concepteone Stephenie Victoria Ira Maria Jane Claudia Pamela Shirley Mellissa Leah Rebecca Simone Alana Loren Joy Angie Pheonix Cynthia Christine Eleanor Meg Sophia Eunice

Diana was the one who came up with them. She said her inspiration included TV shows like Matt Houston, T.J. Hooker, Santa Barbara, and The Young and the Restless.

If you could go back in time and rename this baby girl, which two names (out of the 49) would you choose as her first and middle names?

Sources:

  • Musala, Jane C. “A Nickname Makes it 45.” Allegheny Times 30 May 1989: A3.
  • Musala, Jane C. “The Good News is Short-Lived.” Allegheny Times 28 Jun. 1989: A3.

How did the movie “The Birds” influence baby names in the 1960s?

Actress Tippi Hedren in the movie "The Birds" (1963)
Tippi Hedren in “The Birds

Last month, HBO aired an original movie called The Girl. I didn’t see it, but the reviews tell me it was about the relationship between director Alfred Hitchcock and actress Nathalie Kay “Tippi” Hedren, who starred in two of Hitchcock’s movies: The Birds (1963) and Marnie (1964).

And that reminded me — both of these Hitchcock films had an effect on baby names in the 1960s.

The Birds inspired two SSA debuts: Tippi and Pleshette (from the surname of fellow Birds actress Suzanne Pleshette).

Tippi debuted in 1963:

  • 1966: 8 baby girls named Tippi
  • 1965: 12 baby girls named Tippi
  • 1964: 10 baby girls named Tippi
  • 1963: 6 baby girls named Tippi [debut]
  • 1962: not listed

And Pleshette debuted a year later:

  • 1966: 9 baby girls named Pleshette
  • 1965: not listed
  • 1964: 7 baby girls named Pleshette [debut]
  • 1963: not listed
  • 1962: not listed

Tippi was off the list again by the mid-1970s, and Pleshette hung on until the late 1980s.

The psychological thriller Marnie wasn’t behind any debuts, but it did make the name Marnie trendy for several years:

  • 1968: 446 baby girls named Marnie [rank: 456th]
  • 1967: 252 baby girls named Marnie [rank: 600th]
  • 1966: 245 baby girls named Marnie [rank: 606th]
  • 1965: 267 baby girls named Marnie [rank: 584th]
  • 1964: 112 baby girls named Marnie
  • 1963: 38 baby girls named Marnie
  • 1962: 30 baby girls named Marnie

Marnie saw peak usage in 1969, but was out of the top 1,000 again by 1978. In 2011, just 16 baby girls were named Marnie.

Which of these three names do you like best: Tippi, Pleshette, or Marnie?

Source: SSA

Image: Screenshot of The Birds

What turned Luka into a girl name (briefly) in the 1980s?

Suzanne Vega's album "Solitude Standing" (1987)
Suzanne Vega album

In 1987, the traditionally male name Luka — which had been absent from the U.S. baby name data for a couple of years — didn’t just return to the data as a boy name, but debuted with even higher usage as a girl name:

Girls named LukaBoys named Luka
1990.10
1989.9
198888
198711*8
1986..
1985..
1984.7
*Debut

Why?

Because of the song “Luka” by singer-songwriter Suzanne Vega.

Despite the weighty subject matter (child abuse), the song became Vega’s most successful single, reaching #3 on Billboard‘s Hot 100 chart in August and earning three Grammy nominations (Song of the Year, Record of the Year, and Best Female Pop Vocal Performance).

“Luka” is sung from the point of view of a young abuse victim named Luka. Though Luka’s gender isn’t specified in the lyrics, a young boy plays the part of Luka in the music video:

(This video won the MTV Video Music Award for Best Female Video, btw.)

When Vega’s then-manager asked her where she got the name, Vega answered:

A 9-year-old boy who lives in my building. Who is not abused, by the way. I like the name Luka, it’s universal. It could be a girl or boy and it could be any nationality.

A handful of U.S. parents clearly agreed with Vega regarding Luka’s gender-neutral nature back in 1987. Since then, though, the name gone back to seeing higher usage for baby boys.

What are your thoughts on the baby name Luka? Do you prefer it as a boy name or as a girl name?

Sources:

P.S. A similar thing happened to the name Nico two decades earlier…