La Bohème (1926 film)
Poster from La Bohème (1926 film); Image via Wikipedia

Once again, Girls Gone Child has expanded her family – and our list of given names.

Our special Saturday Baby Name of the Day is Boheme.

Rebecca Woolf is the blogger behind Girls Gone Child, a project launched when she found herself unexpectedly expecting her firstborn, son Archer Sage. She’s also the author of Rockabye: From Wild to Child.

Daughter Fable Luella followed in 2008 – a spin on Story, and a rhyme with the long-established Mabel.

Earlier this year, she announced that she was expecting again – and this time, twin girls!  Speculation raged for weeks, intensifying after she revealed their initials – R and B – and their top two boys’ names – Revere Blaze and Vox Shepherd.

The girls arrived earlier this week: Reverie Lux and Boheme Shalom.  Three of the four names have some precedent, but Boheme?  That one knocks my socks off!

Bohème is the French word for a bohemian – there once was a Kingdom of Bohemia, but it has long since been used to describe a certain style – artistic, unconventional, free-spirited.

In French, the term bohemién was initially interchangeable with gypsy, but by the nineteenth century it applied to the artists in Paris’ Latin Quarter.  Henry Murger penned Scènes de la vie de bohème beginning in 1845.  Based on his own life as a struggling writer, the story inspired the most famous use of the term: Puccini’s masterwork, the opera, La bohème.

The tale ends tragically, with the death of the lovely Mimi.  But she’s immortal in the enduring tale, one of the most frequently performed operas worldwide, adapted for movies and more.

Meanwhile, the term bohemian has entered general use to apply to a host of styles over the generations – beatniks and hippies were both called bohemian; so was punk pioneer Debbie Harry.

In this case, Boheme brings to mind Audrey Hepburn in Funny Face – avant garde, but in a very accessible, attractive way.

Boheme just barely works as a baby name, but here’s why I think it wears as well as many unusual choices:

  • With names like Genevieve and Vivienne on the rise, Boheme will be one of many mademoiselles;
  • Short form Bo is boyish, but also has precedent, like the medieval Isabeau, as well as 80s pin-up Bo Derek;
  • She sounds something like poem, making her pronunciation easier to explain;
  • Even if you’ve never heard an aria, you’re probably dimly aware of the opera – if only because Broadway hit Rent owes its plot to Puccini – and have a sense that the Boheme in question is a girl.

Overall, Boheme is startling.  The only other use I could think of was Patrick Swayze’s cross-dressing character in 1995’s To Wong FooVida Boheme.  But much searching turned up two things – a very small number of Bohemes in the US Census records – maybe half a dozen.  And here’s an equally ahead-of-the-curve mama who had Boheme on her short list of possible middle names.

She’s an unusual choice, but one that feels just right for the GGC family – and who knows?  Maybe more baby girls, too.

About Abby Sandel

Whether you're naming a baby, or just all about names, you've come to the right place! Appellation Mountain is a haven for lovers of obscure gems and enduring classics alike.

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30 Comments

    1. That’s interesting – I am almost certain that Mimi introduces herself by saying “They call me Mimi” – which implies that she does have some other name. Googling … yup, she introduces herself with, depending on your translation, “They call me Mimi, but my name is Lucia.”

      Well spotted, Nieke!

  1. What a sib set!!! I must admit that it is hard for me to not read BO-Heem… which sorta grates on me.. but Bo- Em is is so much prettier… so I am on the fence with this one.. im not sure I would risk the amount of mispronunciation … but it is very obvious that it is this couples style.. I really like Fable!

  2. It’s a lovely word with a fun, quirky history and it definitely goes with the rest of the siblings’ monikers. My only real problem with using Boheme as a name is its the teasing potential I can see (it sounds slightly similar to “bum”). Not a terrible drawback, but a possibility.

  3. I love Hal and Rebecca’s choices for their twin girls. I’m very excited to hear the stories behind Bo and Rev’s names. While their style definitely isn’t my style, I like how much thought they put into their kids’ names. At first glance to some people, they seem like just four more wacky hipster baby names. But there is so much meaning behind them. Boheme Shalom could be a wish for their daughter to be a peaceful free spirit. Reverie Lux has peaceful connotations as well; it could be a wish for their daughter to bring light to everyone she meets.

  4. Thanks for the great write-up on this imaginative name!

    My favorite thing about Rebecca’s twins’ names is the way the nicknames go together, which she alluded to at the end of one of her recent posts. “Fais de beaux [pronounced ‘Bo’] r

  5. It goes well with the rest of the names, which have artsy and spiritual meanings combined. Reverie and Boheme very nicely have the french connection which is somewhat more subtle than starting with the same letter or rhyming to make a pair. In my experience with lesser-known names, I’d expect a fair bit of “bo heem?” from those who encounter the name in written form first and a fair few “bo em? what does that mean? what kind of name is that?” type responses when introducing her verbally…. but then, I’m quite sure mom and dad already thought of that! I love the adventurous side of the names!

  6. I like Boheme but Shalom just doesn’t flow…I think it’s the two syllables ending in M sounding kind of clunky. I am also bilingual English/French so I hear it in my head as “bo-EHM” (the region I learned French in has an accent all it’s own sometimes!) so bo-EHM sha-LOHM. I LOVE Lux tho so I’d swap it to Lux Reverie or Lux Shalom and Boheme Reverie.

    I’ve had a long running love affair with Lucy/Lucasta and am getting Fiat Lux tattooed on me this fall sometime.

  7. When I see the word Boheme it’s hard not to read it bo-heem, even though I know the French pronounciation. I also actually prefer it pronounced phonetically. I’d put it on a shortlist but I know my OH would never agree!

    1. Me too. In Canada, the mascot for Quebec’s winter carnival is called Bonhomme and it was the first place my mind went when I heard the name!

      BUT, reading this post and learning the history, the connection to bohemian, I see 100% why they chose it! Still loving Reverie, though!