It used to be that very few stars went by a single name. Madonna started her career as simply Madonna (and good thing too; having to say Madonna Louise Ciccone every time we talked about her would be a mouthful). But over time, and with the advent of more and more gossip magazines and blogs, features like, "Stars -- They're Just Like Us!" -- stars have increasingly become referred to on a first name basis. We've singled out the biggies, starting with ...
Cher
Oprah
Professionally and legally, Oprah is still Ms. Winfrey. But the media mogul, has been broadcasting into our living rooms since 1986, so we know her like our favorite auntie. Her expansion into magazines, with O, has simplified her name even further, to just one letter.
Angelina, Jen and Brad
There are millions of people with these names, yet we don't need to explain who we are referring to. These three names will be forever linked in infamy, since Brad Pitt left his wife Jennifer Aniston for Angelina Jolie in 2005. Until then, they didn't dominate the tabloids: Jolie would occasionally appear for hijinks with her brother or her then-husband Billy Bob Thornton, but Aniston and Pitt seemed to have a picture-perfect marriage and rarely made the headlines. Now, we'll always refer to them by their first names.
Britney
Janet
Remember when Janet Jackson insisted you call her by her full name? As she sang in "Nasty" in 1986, "You know, my first name ain't baby. It's Janet, Miss Jackson, if you're nasty." Those days are long gone, as the youngest Jackson put out a record called Janet, in 1993, and her mega-platinum recording artist status has catapulted her into a first-name basis for the last decade. She told USA Today, "[c]ertain people feel I'm just riding on my last name ... That's why I just put my first name on Janet. and why I never asked my brothers to write or produce music for me." Though she's legally "Janet Damita Jo Jackson," her website's entry page, announces her simply: "Janet."
Beyonce
Sting and Bono
Both of these singers completely reinvented themselves. By giving themselves solo names that don't have a whit to do with their real name, they gave themselves a larger-than-live persona befitting of a rock star. Ironically, Gordon Sumner got his rather masculine nickname because he was wearing something so dorky-a striped black and yellow sweater-that his Police band mates made fun of him and compared him to a bee. Without Sting, the Police might have been three guys nearing middle-age, and might never have become sex symbols or reached superstardom. Having some dude named Sting in the band made them rock stars. And can you imagine a man named Paul David Hewson (Bono) parading around in sunglasses at night, spouting on behalf of various causes, and getting nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. Didn't think so.





