therizyflapper
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 264
- Location
- thousand oaks CA
Or Rosa Savoia. It has a sort of aristocratic ring to it.
oh i adore this one!!!!! i just wish i could somehow add alicia to that haha
Or Rosa Savoia. It has a sort of aristocratic ring to it.
Every problem has a solution and I believe I found it. May I introduce...
Rosalicia di Savoia![]()
I think you are overthinking the "memorable" aspect. Names like Clara Bow and Jean Harlow are eminently forgettable in themselves! You only remember them because you are interested in the people. You are the person who will make your name memorable, not the name itself.
Or Rosa Savoia. It has a sort of aristocratic ring to it.
Rosa Savoia sounds very intriguing. I vote for this one.
Well, I can only give you my opinion
I'd say pick Rosa Savoia if you want a more sophisticated and polished image. It's like the names of the performers of old, sensuous and a bit mysterious.
It'll be unique.
I can see Rosa Savoia replying to a reporter "Why, I'll only use pearls on my skin!"![]()
Or Rosalicia, if you'd like a more modern, (dare I say , funky?), a brighter, more colourful image.
But it really comes down to what you're more comfortable with.![]()
People will have problems pronouncing the Rosalicia name, which is never good. Lots of people will end up saying "that Rosalicia di Savsomething" model.
Clara Bow is kind of a dull, common name. And it was her birth name. Jean Harlow was Harlean Carpenter's mother's maiden name. Maybe a family name from your ancestry?
oh haha that is true huh hahaha and that is a really good idea!Do you know your great-grandmother's maiden name? Maybe you can use that as your "pinup" name. Why can't you use your real name? Most famous women in the 20s and 30s used their real names or used family names as their stage names. The only ones who used long, sensual names were the "vamps" who even invented entirely new histories for themselves. For example, Theodosia Goodman from Ohio became "Theda Bara" from Arabia. Winifred Shaughnessy from Utah became the "Natacha Rambova." Others just had unfotunate birth names, like Reatha Watson (who became Barbara LaMarr). Alicia sounds timeless. Pair it with an ancestral last name.
I'd go through the family papers, ask relatives and aren't records kept in the City Hall or the local library?