Otis Day (my man!)
The “heroine” of Jacqueline Susann’s “Once Is Not Enough” is a nymphomaniac named January Wayne.
As noted in post #2 of this thread.
and on a similar note, the hero of Fahrenheit 451 was Montag
Which Sampiro said in post #17.
Does no one read threads before posting anymore?
April Patterson, from For Better or For Worse.
The March Hare, from Alice in Wonderland
June Moon is the real name of the Enchantress, a DC Comics character who is sometimes a heroine and sometimes a villainess.
Darn.
did they ever?
Actually, I’m following several current threads. Just because I don’t remember every post in every thread, it doesn’t mean that I’m not reading them.
Well, if Christmas counts, check my user name. Taken from the chracter Annie Christmas in “Whistle Down the Wind.”
Speaking of musicals, the character Brent Spinner played on Night Court had a wife named June. When the couple got hold of some cash, they put it in her bra, causing Judge Harry to remark “June is busting out all over.” Which is a song from the show Carousel.
Obligagory Buffy reference: Jennie Calendar
Crap.
Funny, my bday is the 17th of crapember
Lousy Smarch weather.
Another one I’m embarrassed to admit knowing: In Three’s Company, Chrissy’s full first name is Christmas. Making her Christmas Snow. :rolleyes:
And one of the girls in Marvel’s X-Nation 2099 was code-named December. I have no idea what her real name was. I’m not even sure if any of them had “real” names.
IIRC, there was a villain called Dr. Julian September in an issue of the prior run of JLA.
Judge Alfred Weeks from The Practice
There seems to be several Septembers already, but one more: pop singer from Sweden
May “Mayday” Parker; child of Peter Parker/Spider Man and Mary Jane Parker in an alternate future.
Baron Saturday from Witches Abroad.
I was also going to mention Skua September, from Alan dean Foster’s Humanx series, but was beaten to it.
Ash - played by Ian Holm in Alien.
Lonnie Coleman’s Beulah Land has a slave named Monday Kendrick.
In Mary Higgins Clark’s “Our Gal Sunday” has a heroine named Sandra O’Brien who marries Henry Britland IV and is called “Sunday” after the radio soap heroine.
I was so hoping to be the one to sign in on this.