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Daily archives for May 20th, 2011

WHERE’D YA GET THAT NAME?

May20
2011
Leave a Comment Written by classicmovieguys

 

Hello everybody.  Mrs. Norman Maine is out looking for the man that got away. But Mr. Joe Morella and Mr. Frank Segers are here, still chatting about classic movies and movie stars.

We all know Whoopie Goldberg appropriated her name from whoopie cushion back when she was a stand up comic, and that Nicholas Gage (nee Coppola, he’s FFC’s nephew) took his from a cartoon character, Luke Cage.  But it’s fun to learn about actors who took their names from characters they portrayed.

Pictured above is Byron Barr.

You might remember him  as an extra and bit player at Warner Brothers where he was often unbilled or occasionally listed as Byron Barr.  But in the 1942 film “The Gay Sisters” costarring Barbara Stanwyck, George Brent and Geraldine Fitzgerald, he played a character called Gig Young – and guess what? The studio and Barr decided they liked that name better than the Byron Elsworth Barr monicker he was born with in 1913.

Young certainly wasn’t the first nor the last actor to do this. It probably started with Moliere’s troupe, or maybe even the Greeks.  In Young’s case, he was under some name-change pressure unknown to his classical predecessors because another actor was billed at the time as Byron Barr.  (The Screen Actors Guild frowns on the use of the same name by any two performers.)

“The Gay Sisters” not only gave him a new name but provided Young’s career a much-needed push. As a result, he happily gave up his part time job as a gas station attendant to concentrate on making movies full time. After service in the Coast Guard during World War II, Young returned to Hollywood and carved out a solid career in mostly light secondary leading roles.

Back in 1934 a child actress, Dawn O’Day (who’d been born Dawn Evelyn Paris), starred in a film version of the classic “Anne of Green Gables,” and everafter called herself the name of the character she’d played, Anne Shirley.

Shirley didn’t make many films remembered today except perhaps for director King Vidor’s renowned 1937 tearjerker “Stella Dallas,” where she portrayed Barbara Stanwyck’s daughter; and in 1944, Edward Dmytryk’s hard boiled “Murder, My Sweet.”  In that, her last film, she played the “good” girl opposite  Dick Powell’s version of Philip Marlow.  Claire Trevor was her evil stepmother.

Shirley was married briefly to John Payne (who once had a flaming romance with Jane Russell) and their daughter, Julie Payne, became an actress.

YESTERDAY’S PIC:   A snapshot from the Donald Gordon Collection shows Dorothy Lamour signing an autograph for a fan. In the good ole days stars were always happy to meet and talk with their fans. (except Garbo, of course, who reputedly didn’t even talk to her co-stars.  Frederick March once said, “Making a film with Greta Garbo does not constitute an introduction.”)   Dottie loved her fans and they were devoted to her.

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Posted in children of stars, Rare Photos - Tagged Anne Shirley, Francis Ford Coppola, Garbo, Gig Young, Nicholas Cage, Whoopi Goldberg

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