Difference between revisions of "Intersection"
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− | {{convention | series=Worldcon | year=1995 | before=ConAdian | after=L.A.con III | files= | + | {{convention | series=Worldcon | year=1995 | before=ConAdian | after=L.A.con III | files={{fancy}} | series1=British Worldcons | before1=Conspiracy '87 | after1=Interaction |
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Revision as of 01:55, 17 May 2020
The 1995 Worldcon was held August 24-28 1995 in Glasgow, Scotland at the Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre (SECC) and the nearby Moat House Hotel. Parties took place at the Central and Crest Hotels about a mile away in central Glasgow. It has become known by some as Interthingy 1. GoHs: Samuel R. Delany (writer), Gerry Anderson (media), and Les Edwards (artist). FGoH: Vincent Clarke. It was chaired by Martin Easterbrook and Vince Docherty. Diane Duane and Peter Morwood were Toastmasters. It was also known as The Scottish Convention.
Intersection was also the 1995 Eurocon.
When Intersection won, Tim Illingworth and Vincent Docherty were Co-Chairmen. Docherty moved to Oman, resigned and was replaced by Martin Easterbrook. Illingworth subsequently resigned and was replaced by Docherty even though he remained in Oman. Easterbrook and Docherty were Co-Chairmen during the last 18 months of planning and at the convention. With Docherty living in Oman, most of the organizational work fell to Easterbrook. At con, a team of Martin Easterbrook, Vince Docherty, Margaret Austin, Oliver Gruter-Andrew, and Fiona Anderson acted as an executive committee.
The Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre was a good facility, but even with the space in the attached Moat House Hotel, it did not have enough smaller rooms for the program. The committee remedied this by using pipe and drape curtains to subdivide an exhibit hall into four program rooms. The pipe and drape only went up about ten feet, so the "rooms" extended to the ceiling of the exhibit hall, perhaps 30 feet up. The result was a very noisy environment with continual interference between simultaneous program items. When the Glasgow in 2005 bid started, the facility had added more small rooms and their motto was "Once more with ceiling!"
The convention newsletter was Voice of the Mysterons, edited by Steve Davies.
John Brunner died on Friday at the convention, and the Hugo Ceremony began with Robert Silverberg giving a moving and dignified eulogy which ended with the entire convention rising for a standing ovation for Brunner.
The UK in '95 bid committee won the right to host the convention by defeating Atlanta in '95 at MagiCon, the 1992 Worldcon. The NY in '95 hoax bid also participated in the race, but did not file. There was a hoax bid, Wintersection.
The Science Programme was one of the first to have a set of web pages giving more detail about the programme items and their participants, and is preserved here, together with a write-up Ken Walton and Jo Walton's multi-day colonisation game. Copies also downloadable from here. A highlight was the highly detailed Epona Project with a multinational exhibition and programme items.
At Site Selection, Baltimore in '98 beat Boston in '98 for the right to hold BucConeer.
After the convention, Disection was held as a post-mortem event, and website Another Fine Nessie written about conrunning experiences.
See also British Worldcons
ConAdian | Worldcon - Bidding - Hugos | L.A.con III |
Conspiracy '87 | British Worldcons | Interaction |
Eurocon 1994 | Eurocon | Lithuanicon |
1995 |
This is a convention page. Please extend it by adding information about the convention, including dates, GoHs, convention chairman, locale, sponsoring organization, external links to convention pages, awards given, the program, notable events, anecdotes, pictures, scans of publications, pictures of T-shirts, con reports, etc. |