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Parsing: Natasha Gregson Wagner
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorT!M
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How do we parse Natasha Gregson Wagner?

I've done some research - Wikipedia (and various other sources) reports: "Natasha's birth surname is Gregson, though Robert Wagner raised her after Natalie Wood's death by drowning in 1981." I encountered a contribution citing this in order to change the parsing to Natasha//Gregson Wagner - is that correct? Or not? The same Wikipedia-article refers to her as "Wagner" too...
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributormarcelb7
Registered: Oct. 16, 2000
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There is a cultural and semantic difference of the phrase "maiden name". In Europe, a woman's maiden name is part of the last name, either with or without a hyphen. And in the US, it's considered a middle name.
For people who sort their cast and crew by "last name first name", the various parsings of maiden names can be confusing.

Personally, I would use Natasha//Gregson Wagner, but then again, I'm European 
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorWinston Smith
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Psst, Marcel, Natasha is an American not a European. So I think applying Euro culture is ummmm incorrect.

I think the various references in the wiki article to Ms. Wagner, NOT Ms. Gregson Wagner says it all.

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 Last edited: by Winston Smith
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantAgrare
Registered: May 22, 2007
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Quoting marcelb7:
Quote:
And in the US, it's considered a middle name.


It is?

-Agrare
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantStar ContributorTheMadMartian
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Quoting marcelb7:
Quote:
There is a cultural and semantic difference of the phrase "maiden name". In Europe, a woman's maiden name is part of the last name, either with or without a hyphen. And in the US, it's considered a middle name.
For people who sort their cast and crew by "last name first name", the various parsings of maiden names can be confusing.

Personally, I would use Natasha//Gregson Wagner, but then again, I'm European 

You shouldn't make that assumption when it comes to the US as it is, in fact, wrong.  While some women will replace their middle name with their maiden name, it certainly isn't the norm.

The norm, at least the last time I checked the statistics, was to drop the maiden name completely.
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorArdos
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Quoting Agrare:
Quote:
Quoting marcelb7:
Quote:
And in the US, it's considered a middle name.


It is?

-Agrare


I think he meant that sometimes women in the US drop their middle name in favour of their maiden name when they marry while here in Europe it's not at all common to do that & I've certainly not come across it at all. I can't remember the alleded percentage, but it was lower than some users here would have us believe.

As for this particular case, I did a search & found references to both however 1/2/3 did seem to be the most common.
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile Registrantkdh1949
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Natasha Gregson Wagner presents an unusual problem.

Natasha Gregson was born to Natalie Wood (American) and Richard Gregson (Brit?).  When her mother married Robert Wagner for the second time (with Gregson in between), Robert Wagner adopted Natasha, thereby giving her the name Wagner.  So this isn't exactly the same thing as with the standard "maiden name" argument.  While I suppose technically "Gregson" could be considered her "maiden" name, since she added her step-father's surname an argument COULD be made that "Gregson Wagner" is now her surname.  It's not as if Natasha Gregson married someone named Wagner -- she inherited "Wagner" when her step-father adopted her.  She evidently chooses to respect her two fathers by using both names in credits.
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DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantStar ContributorPantheon
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Personally I don't care what you people or this stupid poll says: it's Natasha/Gregson Wagner and that's how it's going to stay in my db!
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorAce_of_Sevens
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I've lived in the US for 25 years and have barely heard of replacing the middle name with the maiden name. The norm is to drop it. If retained, it is invariably part of the last name.
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorAddicted2DVD
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Oh it is definitely done... I know women that has done it. And heard of several others doing it. It could be more regional (within certain areas of the US) or even a "fad" of the times that may continue or not. But I do know it is being done quite a bit.
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorWinston Smith
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Ace:

You don't get out enough.   I can tell you FACTUALLY that it happens from my own family and from many people I have known over the years both in and out of Hollywood.

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 Last edited: by Winston Smith
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorAce_of_Sevens
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Perhaps it would be better to say that in every customer DB I've ever worked on, we treated maiden name as part of the last name. I think peopel are gettign this from Wikipedia. Note Wikipedia says this is an infomal middle name, I believe meaning only that it is typically written between the first and last names.
 Last edited: by Ace_of_Sevens
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nope... I actually know a few women that dropped their middle name and legally changed their maiden name to their middle name. And know of (friends of friends and such) several others that has done so.

I also heard of women that don't drop their middle... but legally change their names so they have 2 middle names.
Pete
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributortweeter
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Referred to as Ms. Wagner in the NY Times
Referred to as Wagner in the SF Chronicle - 1998 and
again in 2006

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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorWinston Smith
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Nope, Ace wrong again. I speak from personal experience and knowledge, I don't even use Wikipedia. The only way we can KNOW without any investigation is if a hyphen is used this applies to first names as well. Should it be Mary Jane// or Mary/Jane/ BOTH can be correct, if we see Mary-Jane then we know but without the hyphen we know nothing. So we start at Mary/Jane/, if you can document Mary Jane// cool, I won't argue. But if you are going to just say it should be Mary Jane// because you have never seen a Mary/Jane, well then guess what.... We'll do ST IV allover again. I am less concerned about getting the name CORRECT as opposed to it appearing as it does On Screen, I am not sure what value is added to digging up someone's birth and Marriage records and perhaps even other Legal documents so we can get the name CORRECT. And each movie credit stands on its own, just because we might see a NG-W and a NGW does not mean that the name is NG-W, a person can al;ways go to court and get the name changed from NG-W to NGW. Now if we see a sequence of films that was MG-W, NGW and then another NG-W then we can build a prima facie case that the name IS N//GW. I have used myself as an example before Ace, my own name can be listed at least 25 different ways and you would have absolutely no way of knowing which one i might consider the most correct and in such a case what you THINK is not relevant, it is MY name and I will tell YOU what the name IS, Contacting these people is impractical at best, impossible at worst, so we have to start SOMEWHERE, absent a hyphen or some sort of documentation I will always say use the default 1/2/3, at least the data appears as it does On Screen, which seems to me to be the miost important issue from a Profiler POV. Is the target going to get offended, hardly. My last name is so frequently misspelled that unless it is a legal document I don't even worry about it anymore.

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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorWinston Smith
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Quoting tweeter:
Quote:
Referred to as Ms. Wagner in the NY Times
Referred to as Wagner in the SF Chronicle - 1998 and
again in 2006

I could go on but dinner's ready.

I might call you a lot of things tweeter, but never will I call you late for dinner.

Skip
ASSUME NOTHING!!!!!!
CBE, MBE, MoA and proud of it.
Outta here

Billy Video
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