Cary sounds like a girl's name. How on earth did it end up attached to one of the icons of Hollywood masculinity?
Is it a shortening of Oscar?
Or a surname- like Nelson or Shirley- reused as a forename?
Or simply the invention of a wool-gathering Hollywood publicist?
Was Archibald Leach the first Cary or are there earlier examples? Wikipedia doesn't know of any.
Is it a shortening of Oscar?
Or a surname- like Nelson or Shirley- reused as a forename?
Or simply the invention of a wool-gathering Hollywood publicist?
Was Archibald Leach the first Cary or are there earlier examples? Wikipedia doesn't know of any.
no subject
Date: 2012-07-24 10:35 am (UTC)It hadn't sounded like a girl's name to me (until you said that, and now of course Cary / Carrie seems quite obvious). To the extent I'd thought of it at all, I suppose I'd thought of it as a surname, and therefore a boy's name. Searching, I don't find it as a surname (not with that spelling, anyway) but as a place name, which is the next step along the logic chain.
What an interesting question. And the follow-up is, if Cary Grant was the first Cary, was he followed by others? It doesn't seem to have caught on, does it?
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Date: 2012-07-24 10:58 am (UTC)The only more recent Cary I can think of is the English actor Cary Elwes (b 1962)- whose given names are Ivan Simon Cary Elwes.
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Date: 2012-07-24 03:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-07-24 07:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-07-24 05:13 pm (UTC)I haven't read the rest of this biography, but it claims the name was taken from a character he had played. No idea where the character got it from. I'd guess a repurposed surname.
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Date: 2012-07-24 07:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-07-24 05:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-07-24 07:40 pm (UTC)