There's an actor with my lead character's name - how big a problem is this going to be?
I began work A Long Time Ago(tm) on this particular book and only took it up again about eighteen months ago. Back in 2007, I checked around but didn't see anybody of note with the name of my protagonist, let's call them 'Froc Baegar' (because we can, and because there isn't one immediately back from the search engine), so I used the name I'd come up with. Nearing completion and beginning to look into publishing again, I had a sudden rush of blood to the head and Googled my 'Froc Baegar'. Blow me down, an IMDB listing, a live website showing photos of Froc and containing clips of their voice-over work, their Twitter feed, etc, etc, etc.
I'm kind of attached to the name and have begun a little tinkering with cover art and icons based on my character. My character's name is used as a plot device, being given their equivalent of a frock coat and, while it's not an essential part of the story, it's a nice link in to something that is, so changing it is not a simple search & replace.
Can anybody advise on how to best deal with this? Obviously, sending around a fictional hit squad is simplest, but produces no real world result.
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I wouldn't put too much stock in it, especially if they're a Voice-Over Actor who only appeared in a decade or so. I would take a look at his acting credits i.e. which shows he's been on and look at the fanbase of that show. Ultimately, Voice actors get a lot of bit parts and not a lot of recognition (One of the most profelific actors in American history is Frank Welker who, among other things, did the voice of the Original Megatron (and a few other Transformers), Abu (Aladdin), Scooby-Doo (as of 2002) and all incarnations of fellow Scooby-Doo Character Fred Jones save the younger version seen in Pup Named Scooby-Doo... of course, you probably don't realize he's in a movie because Welker has a special talent for animal sounds... if you hear a dog bark in a cartoon, chances are it's Welker, not a real dog, behind the the mic.
Most voice actors don't get recognition unless they were famous before they did VA work (Mark Hamil, who mostly gets mentioned because his first role was the Joker in the 90s Batman cartoon (when the casting department learned that their show's biggest star was Luke Skywalker, they naturally gave him the biggest role, The Joker, much to Hamil's dismay, fearing he would be stepping onto sacred territory). As such, his VA characters tend to be villains and sound nothing like Luke Skywalker) or they have had significant live action pressense after starting in VA work (Such as the case in Kevin Michael Richardson, who had been voice acting for years before he played the Kingpin in the Film version of Daredevil).
Chances are your guy is realatively unknown outside of the circles of fans who enjoy the shows this actor has been on... enough to explain away the google search. I would say unless the character's name appears in the title, I wouldn't be too worried. I do like the above mentioned situation of writing the actor and explaining the situation and asking politely. Voice Actors on a whole tend to be a bit more down to Earth by comparison to screen actors (they aren't recognizable and thus, don't usually have crazy fans screaming their character's lines at them.) and overall, they tend to be quite friendly to each other and some of the older Generations have decades in the community and cross polination among the limited actors normally means that they are all friends and friendly (Peter Cullen... The original Optimus Prime, said his biggest problem with Frank Welker was that Welker has made it his life's mission to get Cullen to blow as many takes as possible while doing various voices).
This post was sourced from https://writers.stackexchange.com/a/29477. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
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I know how attached I can get to my character names, especially since it usually takes me weeks to come up with them (no exaggeration), but as a reader I also know how little importance character names hold for me, and I would have enjoyed the Lord of the Rings equally if it wasn't Frodo and Sam but Fred and Bob getting the Ring to Mount Doom, so what I recommend is being professional about this and chosing another name.
Unless, that is, if it is a very common name, and googling it turns up a variety of people, not just this one actor. If you do an image search and all you see is Tom Cruise, then do not use the name Tom Cruise.
This post was sourced from https://writers.stackexchange.com/a/25024. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
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There are names and there are brands. Lots of people have the same name and it is not reasonable to expect that no fictional character to have a name that no one else does.
Brands, on the other hand, enjoy a degree of uniqueness protection that ordinary names do not. Some actor's names are not only names, they are brands. But merely having a listing on IMDB does not make your name a brand name.
The protection of brand names is by no means absolute. It only covers specific protection against commercial confusion. And the fair use doctrine allows a fair amount of leeway for literary use. IANAL but is seems unlikely that the usage you propose is in any way conflicting with anyone's commercial rights.
On the other hand, people, and publishers, tend to give such issues a wide berth because they don't want the hassle of defending a nuisance suit.
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