Old Hollywood Starlet Names

  1. Lona
    • Origin:

      Diminutive of Leona
    • Description:

      Unfashionable name, with the rather poignant lone sound.
  2. Lupe
    • Origin:

      Latin
    • Meaning:

      "wolf"
    • Description:

      A nickname name heard in Spanish-speaking cultures, might lead to "loopy" jokes here.
  3. Leny
    • Lu Ann
      • Mabel
        • Origin:

          Diminutive of Amabel, Latin
        • Meaning:

          "lovable"
        • Description:

          Mabel is a saucy Victorian favorite rising in popularity in the US over the past decade, after a 50-year nap If you love offbeat old-fashioned names like Violet or Josephine, only sassier, Mabel is one for you to consider.
      • Madge
        • Origin:

          Diminutive of Margery or Margaret
        • Meaning:

          "pearl"
        • Description:

          A super diminutive nickname name, and sometime Madonna nickname – it was how the British tabloids referred to her when she moved to London in the 1990s, which she found annoying until then husband Guy Ritchie said it stood for 'Your Majesty'. Madge Undersee is Katniss's best friend in The Hunger Games books.
      • Marion
        • Origin:

          English and French diminutive of Marie
        • Meaning:

          "drop of the sea, bitter, or beloved"
        • Description:

          An underused classic that has proved surprisingly unisex over the last few decades, being given to roughly the same number of baby girls and boys in the US from the 1970s to the 2000s. For a girl, Marion has a sturdy old-fashioned charm.
      • Marlene
        • Origin:

          German variation of Madeline; combination of Mary and Magdalen
        • Description:

          Marlene Dietrich made it famous when she condensed her first two names, Maria and Magdalena. Now more often pronounced with two syllables rather than three.
      • Neoma
        • Origin:

          Greek or Hebrew
        • Meaning:

          "new moon; pleasantness"
        • Description:

          An obscure yet on-trend name with two wonderful meanings associated with it. Neoma is one of the freshest celestial girl names with moon-related meanings, rarer than Luna or Phoebe but with the same fluid sound.
      • Nita
        • Origin:

          Hindi, Hebrew, and Choctaw
        • Meaning:

          "friendly, to plant, and bear"
        • Description:

          One of those slender names, like Lena or Etta, that's used in several cultures and carries a range of meanings. But by being so many things, it doesn't feel decidedly like anything.
      • Olive
        • Origin:

          English, from Latin, nature name
        • Meaning:

          "olive tree"
        • Description:

          Though greatly overshadowed by the trendy Olivia, Olive has a quiet, subtle appeal of its own -- and is now enjoying a remarkable comeback. Olive is one of only four girl names starting with O on the US Top 1000. Cool couple Isla Fisher and Sacha Baron Cohen chose it for their daughter, reviving the name to stylishness, and now Drew Barrymore has a little Olive too, as has country singer Jake Owen.
      • Pola
        • Origin:

          Short form of Amapola, Arabic
        • Meaning:

          "poppy"
        • Description:

          Pola is an international name that still bears the femme fatalish air of Polish-born silent screen vamp Pola Negri, whole birth name was Apolonia. Rarely used, she could join sisters Lola and Nola.
      • Rosalind
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "supple horse or pretty rose"
        • Description:

          Rosalind has a distinguished literary history – used and popularized by Edmund Spenser and Shakespeare via one of his most charming heroines, in As You Like It. Along with a bouquet of other Rose names, Rosalind might be ready for a comeback.
      • Sally
        • Origin:

          Diminutive of Sarah
        • Meaning:

          "princess"
        • Description:

          Sally is a cheerful, fresh-faced girl-next-door name that was originally a nickname for Sarah, but has long been used independently. Sally was popular in the eighteenth century and then again from the 1920s to the 1960s--it was just outside the Top 50 around 1940. Though it hasn't been heard as a baby name for decades, we can see Sally bouncing back, especially after her exposure as young Ms. Draper on Mad Men--the Nameberries rank it at Number 621, and it's a Top 100 name in Sweden.
      • Toshia
        • Ursula
          • Origin:

            Latin
          • Meaning:

            "little female bear"
          • Description:

            A saint's name with a noteworthy literary background, including uses by Shakespeare in Two Gentlemen of Verona and Much Ado About Nothing, by Ben Johnson, Walter Scott, Longfellow, D. H. Lawrence and Neil Gaiman. In real life, her two most well known representatives are writer Ursula Le Guin and actress Ursula Andress. In literature, there is also Ursula Iguaran, a key, long-lived character in Gabriel Garcia Marquez's major work, One Hundred Years of Solitude.
        • Vera
          • Origin:

            Russian
          • Meaning:

            "faith"
          • Description:

            Vera was the height of fashion in 1910, then was for a long time difficult to picture embroidered on a baby blanket. Now, though, it has come back into style along with other old-fashioned simple names such as Ada and Iris.
        • Virginia
          • Origin:

            Latin
          • Meaning:

            "virginal, pure"
          • Description:

            Virginia is a lovely place name starting with the fashionable V and having deep historical roots, yet, unlike some other other girls' classics, has been sorely neglected in recent years.
        • Zorka
          • Origin:

            Hungarian diminutive of Zora
          • Meaning:

            "dawn"
        • Zula
          • Origin:

            English, derived from Zulu, South African tribal name
          • Description:

            Related to the powerful South African warrior people, sometimes chosen by African-Americans to celebrate their heritage.