Jon Bon Jovi, Jennifer Aniston and 28 Other Celebrities Who Changed Their Names

From shortened last names to childhood nicknames that stuck, these celebrities made a major switch before entering Hollywood

<p>John Nacion/Getty; Pascal Le Segretain/Getty; Frazer Harrison/Getty</p> Jon Bon Jovi visits the Empire State Building on September 15, 2023 in New York City ; Jennifer Aniston attends the "Murder Mystery 2" photocall at Pont Debilly  on March 16, 2023 in Paris ; John Legend attends the 3rd Annual Academy Museum Gala at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on December 03, 2023 in Los Angeles

Celebrities from Jon Bon Jovi to John Legend are some of the most well-recognized monikers in the world — but for many, it's not the name they were born with.

Whether it be to shorten their name or make it more memorable to stand out in Hollywood, many celebrities choose to tweak or adapt an entirely new name when they start rising in fame.

From Kirk Douglas to Marilyn Monroe, here are 31 celebrities who have changed their name.

Kirk Douglas

Nancy R. Schiff/Getty Images Kirk Douglas
Nancy R. Schiff/Getty Images Kirk Douglas

The late Kirk Douglas was born Issur Danielovitch in upstate New York, the son of poor and illiterate Russian immigrants Herschel and Bryna, who later went by Harry and Bertha.

He told PEOPLE in 2015 that, before pursuing a career in show business, he changed his name because his given name was too unwieldy and too Jewish for Hollywood at the time.

"I wish I had kept it," he said, looking back on the decision. "It's more interesting to keep your original name. But can you imagine that name on a marquee?"

The Douglas name carried over to Kirk's son, Michael Douglas, whose name would force another actor on this list to adopt a name change.

Dove Cameron

Bruce Glikas/Getty Dove Cameron
Bruce Glikas/Getty Dove Cameron

Born Chloe Celeste Hoffman, the actress legally changed her name to Dove as a tribute to her late father, who called her that as a nickname.

"He called me Dove more than he ever called me Chloe," she told StyleWatch. "He passed away when I was 15, and I decided to legally change it. So it's on my passport — everything legal is Dove."

However, she shared on Twitter in September 2017 that she responds to both names, and friends and family still call her Chloe.

John Legend

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty John Legend
Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty John Legend

Born John Roger Stephens, the singer's stage name comes from a childhood nickname that stuck.

"John Legend is a nickname that some friends started calling me, and it kind of grew into my stage name," he told MTV in 2008. "It grew to the point where more people in my circle would know me by that name than by my real name."

Meg Ryan

Cindy Ord/Getty Meg Ryan
Cindy Ord/Getty Meg Ryan

Ryan's moniker might sound short and sweet, but her real name is quite a mouthful: Margaret Mary Emily Anne Hyra.

She began using her grandmother's maiden name, "Ryan," as a surname when she joined the Screen Actors Guild, Entertainment Weekly reported.

Audrey Hepburn

Archive Photos/Getty Audrey Hepburn
Archive Photos/Getty Audrey Hepburn

The origins of Hepburn's true name are shrouded in mystery. Sources have disagreed on the exact birthname of the Belgian-born actress, but The New York Times reported she was born Edda van Heemstra Hepburn-Ruston.

The names Edda, Audrey (the English form of the Dutch name Edda) and Andrey (a feminine form of Andrew) can be found in different biographies, although Edda is found most frequently, according to Britannica.

Sources do agree, however, that Hepburn's mother was the Dutch baroness Ella van Heemstra and that her British father's surname was Ruston, though he went by the more aristocratic-sounding name Hepburn-Ruston, believing he was a descendant of Mary, Queen of Scots, the encyclopedia reports.

Vin Diesel

Vin Diesel
Vin Diesel

Apparently, the name Mark Sinclair didn't sound tough enough for the actor when he worked as a New York City bouncer before his big break.

The action star shortened his mother's maiden name Vincent to get his new first name. As for "Diesel," he once revealed on Late Night with Conan O'Brien that he got the nickname from friends who said he was always full of energy.

Nicki Minaj

David Fisher/REX/Shutterstock Nicki Minaj
David Fisher/REX/Shutterstock Nicki Minaj

Trinidadian-born rapper Minaj's stage moniker is a shortened version of her real name, Onika Tanya Maraj.

Calvin Harris

Frederick M. Brown/Getty I Calvin Harris
Frederick M. Brown/Getty I Calvin Harris

Fans might have raised an eyebrow when Taylor Swift thanked her then-boyfriend "Adam" at the 2016 iHeartRadio Awards — but Harris goes by Adam Richard Wiles when he's not spinning records.

The Scottish musician told the Shortlist in 2009 that he decided to change his name "to exploit the racial ambiguity of his stage name," according to Esquire.

"My first single was more of a soul track, and I thought Calvin Harris sounded a bit more racially ambiguous," he said. "I thought people might not know if I was Black or not. After that, I was stuck with it."

Charlie Sheen

Michael Buckner/Getty Charlie Sheen
Michael Buckner/Getty Charlie Sheen

Martin Sheen's youngest son, Carlos Irwin Estevez, adopted his father's stage name when he began acting using the name Charlie.

In contrast, Charlie's siblings — Emilio, Ramón and Renée — who are all actors, continue to use their Spanish last name, Estévez.

Diane Keaton

Steve Granitz/WireImage Diane Keaton
Steve Granitz/WireImage Diane Keaton

Keaton's real surname is Hall, as in Annie Hall, the character she played in the Woody Allen film of the same name, which won her an Oscar in 1978. Allen wrote the role specifically for the actress, whom he had previously dated, taking her real last name and combining it with her nickname, Annie, according to Stig Björkman's Woody Allen on Woody Allen: In Conversation with Stig Björkman.

The Marvin's Room star originally changed her surname to Keaton, her mother's maiden name, because there was another actress named Diane Hall in the Actors' Equity Association, according to Vogue.

Olivia Wilde

James Devaney/GC Images Olivia Wilde
James Devaney/GC Images Olivia Wilde

Paying tribute to Oscar Wilde, one of her favorite authors, actress Olivia Jane Cockburn legally changed her last name to Wilde when she began acting.

Katy Perry

Britta Pedersen/dpa-Zentralbild/dpa /MediaPunch Katy Perry
Britta Pedersen/dpa-Zentralbild/dpa /MediaPunch Katy Perry

The pop star was born Katheryn Elizabeth Hudson but changed her name so she wouldn't be confused with actress Kate Hudson (though Perry released her self-titled first album under the name "Katy Hudson" in 2001). Perry is her mother's maiden name.

Miley Cyrus

Miley Cyrus
Miley Cyrus

Cyrus legally changed her name from Destiny Hope to Miley Ray (a rendition of her childhood nickname "Smiley") in 2008.

Nina Dobrev

Jon Kopaloff/FilmMagic Nina Dobrev
Jon Kopaloff/FilmMagic Nina Dobrev

Bulgarian actress Dobrev shortened her name from Nikolina Konstantinova Dobreva.

Jamie Foxx

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Jamie Foxx
Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Jamie Foxx

The Oscar-winning actor was born Eric Marlon Bishop but changed his name to the more gender-ambiguous Jamie Foxx during his stand-up days.

The actor-comedian chose the more feminine-sounding name because female comedians were often called to the stage first, Yahoo! reports.

He chose "Foxx" in honor of Sanford and Son star Redd Foxx.

Joaquin Phoenix

Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images Joaquin Phoenix
Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images Joaquin Phoenix

The actor's parents changed the family's last name from Bottom to Phoenix in the late 1970s to represent a new beginning.

Bruno Mars

LOS ANGELES, CA - DECEMBER 02: Bruno Mars performs at 102.7 KIIS FM's Jingle Ball 2016 at Staples Center on Dec. 2, 2016, in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic) Bruno Mars
LOS ANGELES, CA - DECEMBER 02: Bruno Mars performs at 102.7 KIIS FM's Jingle Ball 2016 at Staples Center on Dec. 2, 2016, in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic) Bruno Mars

Born Peter Gene Hernandez, he later told Latina magazine, "My dad nicknamed me Bruno since I was 2 years old."

"I was going to go by 'Bruno,' one name. Mars just kind of came joking around because that sounds bigger than life. That was it, simple as that."

Mars would later reveal that his father nicknamed him "Bruno" after professional wrestler Bruno Sammartino.

Michael Keaton

Matthew Simmons/Getty Images Michael Keaton
Matthew Simmons/Getty Images Michael Keaton

The actor was forced to change his last name from Douglas to Keaton to enter the actor's union since his birth name, Michael Douglas, was already taken by a future Academy Award-winning actor.

Tom Cruise

ALFREDO ESTRELLA/AFP/Getty Tom Cruise
ALFREDO ESTRELLA/AFP/Getty Tom Cruise

He might be the only Tom Cruise in Hollywood, but not in his family! The actor's birth name is Thomas Cruise Mapother IV. He began using his middle name as a surname at the behest of an agent.

Demi Moore

Gary Gershoff/WireImage Demi Moore
Gary Gershoff/WireImage Demi Moore

Sometimes less is Moore! Born Demetria Gene Guynes, the actress shortened her first name to just Demi. The star's last name is a holdover from her first marriage to singer Freddy Moore.

Whoopi Goldberg

Mike Coppola/Getty Whoopi Goldberg
Mike Coppola/Getty Whoopi Goldberg

Born Caryn Elaine Johnson, the Oscar-winning actress explained that her stage name "Whoopi" comes from the whoopee cushion.

"If you get a little gassy, you've got to let it go. So people used to say to me, 'You're like a whoopee cushion.' And that's where the name came from," she told The New York Times in 2006.

Goldberg is her mother's maiden name, which she opted to use in the hope of being taken more seriously.

"My mother did not name me Whoopi, but Goldberg is my name, it's part of my family, part of my heritage. Just like being Black," she revealed to The Jewish Chronicle in 2011.

Marilyn Monroe

Alfred Eisenstaedt/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Marilyn Monroe
Alfred Eisenstaedt/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Marilyn Monroe

It's hard to imagine the iconic actress by any other name, but Monroe went by several different monikers throughout her life, even before she landed in Hollywood.

Monroe was baptized Norma Jeane Baker, but the name on her birth certificate was Norma Jeane Mortenson. It changed again after she married James Dougherty and adopted his surname.

She didn't legally change her name to Marilyn Monroe until 1956, although she had been publicly known by the moniker since 1946. Ben Lyon, a 20th Century Fox executive, gave her the name Marilyn because she reminded him of actress Marilyn Miller. She picked Monroe after her mother's maiden name.

She later went by Marilyn Monroe Miller after marrying author Arthur Miller in 1956.

Natalie Portman

Natalie Portman
Natalie Portman

Born Neta-Lee Hershlag, the Israeli-American actress took her paternal grandmother's maiden name, "Portman," as her stage name for privacy reasons.

Alicia Keys

Alicia Keys
Alicia Keys

Turns out, the singer's name and impressive piano skills are no coincidence! Keys changed her name from Alicia Augello Cook to reflect her love of music.

Winona Ryder

John Shearer/Getty Winona Ryder
John Shearer/Getty Winona Ryder

The actress changed her last name from Horowitz when asked how she would like to have her name appear on the credits of her first role. She suggested Ryder as Mitch Ryder's album was playing in the background.

Jennifer Aniston

Jennifer Aniston
Jennifer Aniston

No, Aniston's real name is not secretly Rachel Green — it's Jennifer Linn Anastassakis! Her Greek father, actor John Aniston, changed the family's last name when he went into show business.

Elton John

Andrew Chin/Getty Elton John
Andrew Chin/Getty Elton John

Born Reginald Kenneth Dwight, the singer started going by the name Elton John in honor of two blues legends: saxophonist Elton Dean and singer Long John Baldry. As he grew to "dislike" his birth name, he legally changed his name in May 1972, adding the middle name "Hercules."

"When I became Elton John, it was like a new lease on life," he said in a 1987 interview, The Daily Express reported. "I didn't particularly like being Reg Dwight. It had too many unhappy memories."

He added, "I hated the word 'Reg,' anyway. It was just a horrible name."

Martin Sheen

As the son of a Spanish immigrant father and Irish mother, the West Wing actor was born Ramón Antonio Gerardo Estévez. However, he never changed his birth name legally, revealing to Closer Weekly in June 2022 that the name change is one he "regrets."

"That's one of my regrets," he said to the outlet. "Sometimes you get persuaded when you don't have enough insight or even enough courage to stand up for what you believe in, and you pay for it later."

He added, "I never changed my name officially. It's still Ramon Estévez on my birth certificate. It's on my marriage license, my passport, driver's license."

Lily James

<p>Franco Origlia/Getty</p>

Franco Origlia/Getty

The Pam & Tommy star was born Lily Chloe Ninette Thomson, but she adopted the last name James in memory of her late father, James Thomson, who died of cancer in 2008.

Jon Bon Jovi

<p>Lester Cohen/Getty</p> Honoree Jon Bon Jovi attends the 2024 MusiCares Person of the Year Honoring Jon Bon Jovi during the 66th GRAMMY Awards on February 02, 2024 in Los Angeles, California.

Lester Cohen/Getty

Honoree Jon Bon Jovi attends the 2024 MusiCares Person of the Year Honoring Jon Bon Jovi during the 66th GRAMMY Awards on February 02, 2024 in Los Angeles, California.

Legendary rocker Jon Bon Jovi was born John Francis Bongiovi Jr. but when looking for a name for his band, a friend suggested they go by Bon Jovi, similar to Van Halen.

Keeping with the name of his band, the musician began going professionally as Bon Jovi as well.

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