There’s something interesting about the current top 50 baby names for girls in Australia. They’re not actually distinctively Australian. At all. All the names on the list are also popular in the US (eg Harper, Mila, Aria) or the UK (eg Isla, Evie, Willow).
Back in the 1970s, things were different. The Aussie girls’ top 50 was more Aussie. There were plenty of names on it that were used in other countries, like Michelle and Sarah and Lisa. But one of the most popular names was Kylie. In fact, Kylie was the most popular name for girls born in NSW in 1973. Meanwhile, old favourite Narelle was still getting a lot of use, sitting just outside the top 30 in Victoria. Another name in the top 100 was Peta, a female form of Peter that was big here but not in the US or the UK.
What’s special about Kylie and Narelle is that both of them are genuinely Australian names. Kylie is believed to be a Noongar word from WA meaning “boomerang”. Narelle is also listed in names books as being an “Aboriginal” name, possibly originating from somewhere in NSW. Both were pretty much unheard-of in the UK and the US when they were huge here.
But being so Aussie was probably Kylie and Narelle’s downfall. Late 1970s TV comedy The Naked Vicar Show, with its catchphrase, “You’re not wrong, Narelle!” has been blamed for killing Narelle off. As for Kylie, it died in Australia in the late 1980s, around the time that Kylie Mole (“so excellent”) was mocking bogan schoolgirls on The Comedy Company. Even though Kylie Minogue was reaching superstar status – doing the Locomotion and marrying Jason Donovan in the TV wedding of the decade on Neighbours – the name was done here.