Actor and producer Dara Bloomfield and cinematographer Cory Stambler live in New York City, where they welcomed their son Cade Bennett on March 31, 2021.
We spoke with Dara about tradition, namesakes, and the family affair of naming Cade.
Originally, we were looking at B and R names for his first name, for my husband’s grandfather, who was Bob, or Robert, or an M for my uncle. I settled on a name and told my mom, my sisters, and my husband, and no one liked it. Everyone told me it was terrible. My sister is a teacher and said, “this poor kid. It’s not going to work! Trust me on this.”
So we kept going. Cory and I had a list and sat down with my sisters — one on speakerphone — and my mom. We all sat around and read through the list, and none of the names clicked. I was getting so upset and frustrated because I was fixated on the three letters. Finally, my youngest sister said, “Why don’t we just look at a different letter. Let’s find somebody else.” I had a sister who had passed away when I was five named Callie. I was trying to avoid using a C name because my youngest sister is already named for her.
The name Cade has been floating around my family for a long time because it was going to be Callie and my younger sister Catarina’s name if they were boys. Cat goes, “How about Cade?” My husband was like, “Yes, that’s it!” He instantly fell in love, and the thing was, he had never reacted to a name like that. So we stuck with that.
Middle names are really important to me because I’ve always gone by my middle name. Myfamily calls me Dara Paige. I know I’m in trouble when my mom calls me by my first name only.
I started working professionally as an actor when I was 10, and when I had to join the unions, my parents asked me what I wanted my name to be. I told them I wanted my full name. It was a very ‘90s kid thing to do. I produce a lot of shows and work with people who were on Broadway as a kid or acted professionally and everybody goes by their full name too. It was a trend in the early 2000s. I work with current Broadway kids now, and none of them use their middle name.
My middle name is a big part of my identity, so to me, it was really important for Cade to have a cool middle name.
My sister was painting something for his nursery and wanted to put his name on there, soshe asked me if I would tell her. Her reaction was not great. “Ohhhh…that’s nice.” Of course, that led to “What is it? What is it?” from my family, so I told my mom and my other sister. They didn’t love it either.
Morgan is still in my back pocket for a boy, for another day. I’m not a fan of it for a girl, but I love it for a boy. When I was growing up I knew so many Morgans who were girls, but only one who was a boy.
I also liked the name Rhys but that got vetoed because it’s too popular. My sisters both said the Welsh spelling makes it look like “rice.”
Theater and movies and TV shows were always very important to me, so in my head, I imagined having a kid with a name that was slyly after something. I love the name Miller, and Arthur Miller is one of my favorite playwrights. It’s sneaky!
I also had this thing where I wanted to give him a baseball name. There are certain baseball players who have really cool names. There’s nothing else they could possibly do except play baseball, because how could you not with a name like Buster Posey? So I decided that his name had to pass the baseball name test.
It actually took me a little bit to fall in love with the name Cade for him. I loved the story and I loved how much my husband liked the name, but I just wasn’t sold on it. It crossed everything off the list, but I wasn’t sure how it was going to go.
But it made perfect sense once he was born. After I met him, I couldn’t imagine him being anything else. He looks just like my sister Callie [pictured below, center, with Dara and Samantha]. There are certain times of day when I’ll look at him and he has her big eyes. That makes the name for me.
Reign was another one. It felt too Kardashian to me. Even if we spelled it like Rainn Wilson. I have friends that could totally do that, but if we had a kid named Bear, I think my friends would be like, “Are you okay?”
Cade’s name was going to be Beyla if he was a girl. It’s the Yiddish form of Bella. It’s one of my sisters’ Hebrew names, and I absolutely love it. We were still debating the middle name when we found out he was a boy.
My sister was convinced that I would use the name Cosette because one of my all-time favorite musicals is Les Miz. She was joking, but I actually considered it as a middle name for a hot second before learning I was having a boy!
Cade is named for four people, technically. His middle name is for Cory’s grandfather and my two surrogate grandmothers, who were Belle and Betty. I already have the letters picked out for our second baby. Definitely M, and maybe B. So Beyla is still on the list.
When I was looking for names, I was on all the sites, and people get so focused on findingthe sibling set for whatever name they’re going to pick. That’s wonderful and great if that’s what you’re into, but it’s so limiting. They all become a set anyway!
I’m also noticing people getting really creative with middle names. If they go with a verytraditional first name, they use a very nontraditional middle name. I think that’s really cool! I know a lot of people who do go by their middle name as they get older, and I think that’s awesome.
There are some very creative boys’ names out there, but not many that aren’t way too out-there. It was very hard to come up with something we liked that I hadn’t heard many times before.
We started relatively early. We found out we were having a boy around thirteen weeks andstarted looking after that. We would add names periodically and I would look at it every once in a while, but I wouldn’t obsess over it.
Thank you so much, Dara!
Photos via Mirabelle Photography, Dara Bloomfield and Cory Stambler
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Sophie Kihm has been writing for Nameberry since 2015. She has contributed stories on the top 2020s names, Gen Z names, and cottagecore baby names. Sophie is Nameberry’s resident Name Guru to the Stars, where she suggests names for celebrity babies. She also manages the Nameberry Instagram and Pinterest.
Sophie Kihm's articles on names have run on People, Today, The Huffington Post, and more. She has been quoted as a name expert by The Washington Post, People, The Huffington Post, and more. You can follow her personally on Instagram or Pinterest, or contact her at [email protected]. Sophie lives in Chicago.
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