📖 Über Lolita
Lolita ist ein spanisches Doppeldiminutiv von Dolores (dolor, 'Schmerz'), selbst ein Andachtsname von 'Nuestra Señora de los Dolores' (Schmerzensmutter); in der hispanischen Kultur über ein Jahrhundert lang ein vollkommen gewöhnlicher Name, dessen englischsprachige Konnotationen durch Nabokovs Roman von 1955 unwiderruflich verändert wurden — in Spanien und Lateinamerika bleibt er eine herzliche, vertraute Wahl.
📍 Details
- HerkunftSpanish
- Geschlecht♀ Weiblich
- BedeutungVariant of Lola. Sorrows
🔀 Varianten & Verwandte Namen
⭐ Berühmte Persönlichkeiten
- Lolita Torres — Argentine actress and singer (1930–2002), known as “La Novia de la Patria” (the Sweetheart of the Nation); one of the most beloved entertainers in Argentine history, she starred in musical films throughout the 1950s and 1960s and was a fixture of Argentine popular culture for over half a century; a name-bearer who carried Lolita with grace and national affection.
- Lolita Flores — Spanish singer and actress (born 1958), daughter of the legendary flamenco star Lola Flores; she has had a successful career spanning music, television, and theatre, and is one of the most recognisable celebrities in Spain; her continued use of the name Lolita in contemporary Spanish culture illustrates its intact status in the Hispanic world.
- Lolita (Nabokov's novel) — Celebrated and controversial novel (1955) by Vladimir Nabokov, widely regarded as one of the masterpieces of 20th-century English literature; the narrator Humbert Humbert’s obsession with the twelve-year-old Dolores Haze, whom he calls Lolita, gave the name a charged double meaning in the English-speaking world, demonstrating literature’s power to irrevocably alter the cultural weight of a name.
- Lolita Davidovich — Canadian-American actress (born 1961) of Serbian heritage, known for her role in Blaze (1989) opposite Paul Newman and for her work in films including Intersection (1994) and Jungle 2 Jungle (1997); her continued professional use of the name Lolita represents its persistence as a given name in North American culture despite the novel’s shadow.