27 Famous People Who Didn’t Use Their Birth Names

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Gerald Ford, born Leslie Lynch King Jr.

Ford was renamed after his stepfather, Gerald Rudolff Ford, at age three. His mother decided that that was a better option for the boy than keeping the name of his birth father, who threatened both mother and infant with a butcher knife. Luckily, she ditched the father 16 days later, and “Gerald Rudolph Ford Jr.” is the man who would one day become president. After all, “Lynch King” certainly isn’t very presidential.Wikimedia Commons

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Bob Dylan, born Robert Allen Zimmerman

Inspired by the poet Dylan Thomas, Zimmerman took the stage name Bob Dylan not long after he first started playing music onstage. “Some people – you’re born, you know, the wrong names, wrong parents. I mean, that happens,” he told CBS in 2004.Xavier Badosa/Flickr

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Albert Brooks, born Albert Einstein

The reasoning behind this name change should be fairly obvious. The actor/comedian changed his already famous name when he first went into the business — and has since made the name Albert Brooks famous in its own right.Amanda Edwards/WireImage/Getty Images

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John Wayne, born Marion Robert Morrison

Switching names is kind of the Duke’s thing. His middle name was changed shortly after birth, from Robert to Mitchell, because his parents decided that they wanted that name for their next son instead. After moving to California from his Iowa birthplace, a local fireman started calling him “Little Duke” because he was rarely seen without his giant dog named Duke. Later, the director Raoul Walsh switched “Duke Morrison” to “John Wayne.” The actor wasn’t even present for the discussion. Wikimedia Commons

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Bill Clinton, born William Jefferson Blythe III

Clinton was initially named after his father. However, William Jefferson Blythe Jr. died from injuries related to a car accident three months before his son was born. The widowed mother then remarried Roger Clinton Sr. The former president began using the Clinton surname soon after the 1950 wedding, but didn’t legally change it until age 15.Pixabay

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Woody Allen, born Allan Stewart Konigsberg

Not merely a stage name, Woody Allen (technically, Heywood Allen) is in fact the famous director’s legal name, and has been since he was 17, when he changed it himself.Wikimedia Commons

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Annie Oakley, born Phoebe Ann Moses

Many may not realize that wild west sharpshooter Annie Oakley was indeed a stage name. The name likely came from the Oakley area of Cincinnati, Ohio where she and her family lived. Either way, the sharpshooting youngster would have claimed her place in history whatever her name. Wikimedia Commons

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Stevie Wonder, born Steveland Hardaway Judkins

When Berry Gordy signed the musical child prodigy to Motown’s Tamla label, a producer came up with the name “Little Stevie Wonder.” The name Steveland surely would never have had the same chance to catch on. The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas/Flickr

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George Orwell, born Eric Arthur Blair

One of the celebrated author’s earlier works (before classics like Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four) was about his time living in poverty. To avoid embarrassing his family, he used the pen name George Orwell, which he described as “a good round English name.” Wikimedia Commons

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Whoopi Goldberg, born Caryn Johnson

Her mom convinced her to use a Jewish last name, claiming it would advance her career. As far as the first name of “Whoopi,” yes, it’s reportedly a reference to the actresses’ tendency towards flatulence. Daniel Langer/Flickr

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Pelé, born Edson Arantes do Nascimento

The Brazilian soccer player hated the name Pelé; in fact, he punched the classmate that gave it to him. As it turns out, he disliked it because the word actually has no Portuguese meaning, and thus he assumed it to be an insult. He probably felt silly when he only recently found out that it means “miracle” in Hebrew.Wikimedia Commons

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Gene Simmons, born Chaim Witz

For a time, the KISS frontman also went by the name Gene Klein, after the maiden name of his mother, who survived internment at a Nazi concentration camp.Wikimedia Commons

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Mata Hari, born Margaretha Geertruida Zelle

The small-town girl from Holland who found fame as an exotic dancer and convicted spy liked to tell the (fabricated) story of how an ancient Indian priestess gave her the name Mata Hari, which is Malaysian for “eye of the day.” Perhaps under her given name, she’d have never acquired her fame and ultimately never stood before a French firing squad for the crime of espionage.Wikimedia Commons

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Cary Grant, born Archibald Alexander Leach

Paramount Studios was less than thrilled with giving a star contract to someone calling themselves Archibald Leach. The name Cary was suggested by actress Fay Wray, and the studio slapped Grant behind it, and Hollywood royalty was born. Insomnia Cured Here/Flickr

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Alan Alda, born Alphonso Joseph d’Abruzzo

Alda’s last name was made by combining the first two letters of his first and last name. The 20-time Emmy nominated actor, writer, and director perhaps anticipated needing a name that would actually fit on an award inscription plaque.Wikimedia Commons

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Anne Rice, born Howard Allen O’Brien

In Rice’s own words, “My birth name is Howard Allen because apparently my mother thought it was a good idea to name me Howard. My father’s name was Howard … she was a bit of a Bohemian, a bit of mad woman, a bit of a genius … and she had the idea that naming a woman Howard was going to give that woman an unusual advantage in the world.”Joe Scarnici/Getty Images for Entertainment Weekly

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Hedy Lamarr, born Hedwig Eva Maria Kiesler

The stage name Hedy Lamarr was given to the controversial Austrian actress by MGM studio co-founder Louis B Mayer, who was inspired by the silent film star, Barbara La Marr.Wikimedia Commons

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Helen Mirren, born Ilyena Lydia Vasilievna Mironov

Mirren’s Russian roots are evident in her lengthy birth name. Later, she’d get to add one more word to her title: the British honorific of ”Dame.” Tompickenfrets/Flickr

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Jack Palance, born Volodymyr Palahniuk

The son of Ukrainian immigrants, Palance lamented that no one could pronounce his last name, and it was suggested that he use Palanski instead. He, in turn, decided to use the even shorter Palance. Early in his career, he also used the name Walter Jack Palance, but even more surprisingly, had yet another name: Jack Brazzo, his alias as a boxer in the 1930s.TriStar Pictures/Getty Images

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Michael Keaton, born Michael Douglas

Apparently, there’s only room for one actor named Michael Douglas in Tinseltown — and the other guy had dibs. Gage Skidmore/Flickr

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Kirk Douglas: born Issur Danielovitch Demsky

The son of Russian – Jewish immigrants, Kirk Douglas apparently didn’t believe that his old name rolled off the tongue.Wikimedia

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Kareem Abdul Jabbar, born Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor, Jr.

The NBA star’s name change occurred well into his career, on May 1, 1971. He began using his Muslim name Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, which roughly translates to “generous/noble servant of (Abdul) the mighty/stern one (Jabbar),” he had converted to Islam earlier while attending UCLA.Wikimedia Commons

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Jane Seymour, born Joyce Penelope Wilhelmina Frankenberg

Seymour adopted the stage name “Jane Seymour” after King Henry VIII’s third wife and lady-in waiting to Anne Boleyn.Wikimedia Commons

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Michael Caine, born Maurice Micklewhite

Wanting to ditch the name “Micklewhite,” the actor picked the name of Humphrey Bogart’s character in The Caine Mutiny.Wikimedia Commons

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Dusty Springfield, born Mary Isobel Catherine Bernadette O’Brien

The prolific British singer had previously joined a music trio including her brother, Dion, and vocalist Tim Field. The latter’s name is said to have inspired the trio’s name, The Springfields. In addition, the siblings took the trio’s name for their own last names. Mary came to be known as Dusty, although the origin behind this name remains a mystery. Wikimedia Commons

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Michael Landon, born Eugene Maurice Orowitz

Landon opted for a more simple name when he entered acting school. He picked the name randomly from a phone book. Wikimedia Commons

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Judy Garland, born Frances Ethel Gumm

Frances Gumm, who performed with her two siblings as the group “The Gumm Sisters” changed her last name to Garland, and switched her first name to Judy soon after, inspired by a Hoagy Carmichael song.Wikimedia Commons

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