Forum:Married Companions

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Some, such as Jo Jones, use the married name, but others, like Evelyn Smythe, retain the original name.

Should we not have some consistency? TemporalSpleen talk to me 20:25, January 19, 2012 (UTC)
A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds -- Ralph Waldo Emerson. Boblipton talk to me 00:16, January 20, 2012 (UTC)
I think it just depends on what name the character uses. In Death of the Doctor, Jo was shown to have taken Cliff's last name, but Gwen and Amy are both shown to have kept their maiden names in every episode after their weddings. I don't know anything about Evelyn Smythe though, so I'm not sure whether this helps or not.Icecreamdif talk to me 03:15, January 20, 2012 (UTC)
Evelyn is specifically called Evelyn Rossiter in Thicker than Water, and in terms of televised companions Barbara's page still uses "Wright" TemporalSpleen talk to me 17:31, January 20, 2012 (UTC)
I don't think that Barbara was ever shown to have taken any other name though.Icecreamdif talk to me 19:06, January 20, 2012 (UTC)
Death of the Doctor: Sarah Jane refers to Ian and Barbara Chesterton. TemporalSpleen talk to me 21:08, January 20, 2012 (UTC)

Proposed rule change

Guys, please use colons prior to your posts in order to indent your messages. This makes the article conversation easier to read.
As to the current state of our rules, we do have a policy on married characters. Please consult T:CHAR NAMES. Basically, it says that we tend to prefer later to earlier names, and that we don't automatically switch to the married name. We are being consistent with Evelyn's name because her stories are being released out of order. Thus the most current stories involving Evelyn have her as Evelyn Smythe. Yes, her last story, chronologically, has her as Evelyn Rossiter, but that story was close to ten years ago. The most recently released episodes have her as Evelyn Smythe.
Personally, I think a better rule might be "use the name that's in the majority of stories in which the character appears". That's way easier and much less controversial. But that's not the current rule. We can make it the current rule if you like, of course. But, again, it's not the current rule.
czechout<staff />    <span style="">07:54: Sat 21 Jan 2012 
I'd agree, and say that the most frequently used name should be used for the title. --TemporalSpleen talk to me 09:44, January 21, 2012 (UTC)
yes, it should be the most frequently used names or the name the person is known by for the majority of their stories. for example, i think it makes it more confusing to have jo's page under jo jones when for the majority of televised appearances she is known as jo grant (all except for one story to be exact) and jo grant is the name most people (out of universe, of course) know her by. Imamadmad talk to me 07:16, January 23, 2012 (UTC)
I feel this goes against some of the idea of our in-universe pages, writing from the 'end of the universe' perspective. So in many ways I think we should go with their later used names.
As, if there's clear narrative proof of their name change that should be the one we use.
However, I understand that for linking, logic and readability purposes there is benefit in using their most frequently used names.
Also a side note, that A Death in the Family was published in October 2010, chronologically that's Evelyn's last story where she uses Rossiter. --Tangerineduel / talk 13:42, January 28, 2012 (UTC)

Revival

CzechOut reopened this topic because I said at Forum:Disambiguation: Omegas:

Frankly, I think it would make sense for the Doctor's granddaughter to be at Susan or Susan Foreman, and all the other Susans currently at Susan to be at Susan (disambiguation); Susan Campbell seems quite absurd, like another wiki having an article on the protagonist of Pride and Prejudice at "Elizabeth Darcy", or the title character of Jane Eyre at "Jane Rochester" (after all, "Reader, I married him").

Yes, the in-universe pages are meant to be written from the perspective of someone writing from Event Two, but does that really mean that they have to be named that way? I think that article naming is already out-of-universe — otherwise we wouldn't be able to use story names to disambiguate characters with the same name. And from an out-of-universe perspective, it makes much more sense to have the Doctor's granddaughter at Susan or Susan Foreman than at Susan Campbell, because that's where the vast majority of readers will look for her. Jo Grant/Jones is perhaps a trickier issue, since young viewers might know her primarily from The Death of the Doctor, but I'd still favor Jo Grant over Jo Jones and Evelyn Smythe over Evelyn Rossiter. Finally, it's worth remembering that if the practice of always using married names had been in place when this wiki was founded, Sarah Jane Smith would be at Sarah Jane Morley. —Josiah Rowe talk to me 03:35, May 11, 2012 (UTC)

I think it important to clarify that I didn't "reopen" this topic, so much as I mistakenly closed it. There is no precedent being set whereby a topic can be "re-opened" just because there is new interest in a topic. Ordinary procedure is still to simply start a new thread in such a situation.
However, this thread was closed in a hurry, only a few days prior to Josiah's comment, and in my zeal to do normal, quarterly archiving of the forums, I had obviously moved a little too fast. In talking to Josiah about the subject, I was encouraged to re-read the thread more closely, whereupon I found that the topic had not actually been resolved at all.
czechout<staff />    <span style="">20:52: Sun 20 May 2012 

Does anybody still want to defend Donna Temple-Noble? (She had dozens of appearances as Donna Noble, and about a minute on screen as Donna Temple-Noble...) I think that using the name which a character used in the majority of her appearances is a better rule. Anybody want to disagree? —Josiah Rowe talk to me 05:53, May 30, 2012 (UTC)

well, using the most commonly used name makes the most sense. however, if the changed name is used for a significant portion of time on screen (or in text or on audios etc) after being changed, e.g. one or more season versus a short mention in an episode looking back at the past, then i think it would be ok to use the latter name. but in general, the most commonly used name i believe should be preferred. Imamadmad talk to me 11:53, May 30, 2012 (UTC)

We seem to be moving towards a general consensus that it's acceptable to go with the most common name. But I think we should wait about a week for any opposing views to surface.
In the meantime, I think we should examine Imamadmad's proviso. Imamadmad says that characters that have a substantial number of stories under a married name should go with the married name. That means Temple-Noble and Jones are definitely gone (though a redirect should remain), but the Evelyn Rossiter case might need some further discussion.
What does "substantial" mean? Is it enough to have more than one story under the married name? To me, that would be enough to justify the name switch. I tend to think that Rossiter should be at Rossiter with a redirect from Smythe. Where do we think the line is between incidental and substantial use of a married name?
czechout<staff />    <span style="">19:10: Fri 01 Jun 2012 
Pardon me if I don't think there should be any hard-and-fast rule. Amy Pond is called "Amy Williams" a couple of times, but it's not the name she chooses to go by in any substantive sense. Donna intends to call herself "Donna Temple-Noble" so that's all right -- but I would still call her "Donna Temple" because we see her under her married name for less than a minute and never while in direct interaction with the Doctor... perhaps as an alternative name. Evelyn, however, tips the scale on the other side. So it's somewhere between thirty seconds and two or three full stories.
I think that, when there is a problem, the best place to discuss the matter is on the talk page of the character. Frankly "Evelyn Smythe later Rossiter is just right, as is the way we finally decided with River Song. I know that many people are happy with hard-and-fast rules, but there are always sticky cases and it's better to hang your hat on judgment from the get-go.Boblipton talk to me 20:30, June 1, 2012 (UTC)
I agree that we can and should play it by ear in sticky cases. (For example, I still lean towards Jo Grant, but I could see an argument being made for Jo Jones.) —Josiah Rowe talk to me 00:40, June 2, 2012 (UTC)
I, too, agree that we can have exceptions. But an exception definitionally requires a rule. People that are new to editing with us — and we're pickin' up new editors all the time — need a starting guideline to help them. Nothing wrong with specifying the usual pattern and then suggesting that some cases might require special handling.
czechout<staff />    <span style="">18:49: Mon 04 Jun 2012