Lestat is a rare French literary name popularized by Anne Rice, likely a stylized aristocratic surname with uncertain deeper etymology.
Lestat is, in the strictest sense, a literary invention — the full name Lestat de Lioncourt first appeared in Anne Rice's debut novel *Interview with the Vampire* (1976), and the character became the magnetic center of her sprawling Vampire Chronicles series. Rice has said she derived the name partly from a half-remembered French surname and partly from pure phonetic intuition; the aristocratic *de Lioncourt* particle grounds him in pre-Revolutionary France, where he was born in the Auvergne region in the 1760s. The name has no established etymology of its own, which paradoxically increases its mystique.
Lestat as a character is one of the most fully realized vampires in literary history: seductive, amoral, operatically vain, and ultimately complex enough to generate sympathy. Tom Cruise's portrayal in the 1994 film adaptation, and later Sam Reid's acclaimed performance in the AMC television series *Interview with the Vampire* (2022–), brought the character to successive generations. A Broadway musical adaptation ran in 2006.
Across these incarnations, the name Lestat has become shorthand for a certain kind of dangerous glamour — European, immortal, half-monstrous, half-magnificent. Parents who choose Lestat as a given name are making a bold, self-aware statement. It signals literary passion, a taste for the Gothic, and a willingness to bestow a name with sharp cultural edges.
In goth subculture and vampire fiction fandom, it functions almost as an homage. Linguistically the name is striking: the stress falls unexpectedly, the silent final *t* retains a French flavor, and the overall sound is hard to forget — which is, of course, exactly what Lestat himself would want.