Difference between revisions of "1967 Hugos"
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* [[1967 Best Novel Hugo|Best Novel]]: ''[[The Moon is a Harsh Mistress]]'' by [[Robert A. Heinlein]] | * [[1967 Best Novel Hugo|Best Novel]]: ''[[The Moon is a Harsh Mistress]]'' by [[Robert A. Heinlein]] | ||
* [[1967 Best Novelette Hugo|Best Novelette]]: "The Last Castle" by [[Jack Vance]] | * [[1967 Best Novelette Hugo|Best Novelette]]: "The Last Castle" by [[Jack Vance]] | ||
− | * [[1967 Best Short Story Hugo|Best Short Story | + | * [[1967 Best Short Story Hugo|Best Short Story]]: "Neutron Star" by [[Larry Niven]] |
− | * [[1967 Best Dramatic Presentation Hugo|Best Dramatic Presentation | + | * [[1967 Best Dramatic Presentation Hugo|Best Dramatic Presentation]]: ''[[Star Trek]] - "The Menagerie"'' |
− | * [[1967 Best Professional Magazine Hugo|Best Professional Magazine | + | * [[1967 Best Professional Magazine Hugo|Best Professional Magazine]]: ''[[If]]'' ed. by [[Frederik Pohl]] |
− | * [[1967 Best Professional Artist Hugo|Best Professional Artist | + | * [[1967 Best Professional Artist Hugo|Best Professional Artist]]: [[Jack Gaughan]] |
− | * [[1967 Best Fanzine Hugo|Best Fanzine | + | * [[1967 Best Fanzine Hugo|Best Fanzine]]: ''[[Niekas]]'' ed. by [[Ed Meskys]] and [[Felice Rolfe]] |
− | * [[1967 Best Fan Writer Hugo|Best Fan Writer | + | * [[1967 Best Fan Writer Hugo|Best Fan Writer]]: [[Alexei Panshin]] |
− | * [[1967 Best Fan Artist Hugo|Best Fan Artist | + | * [[1967 Best Fan Artist Hugo|Best Fan Artist]]: [[Jack Gaughan]] |
Note: [[Jack Gaughan]] winning both [[Best Fan Artist]] and [[Best Professional Artist]] (legitimately -- he did both fan and pro art) caused the [[Gaughan Amendment]] to be added to the [[WSFS Constitution]], prohibiting an artists from being nominated in both categories in the same year. | Note: [[Jack Gaughan]] winning both [[Best Fan Artist]] and [[Best Professional Artist]] (legitimately -- he did both fan and pro art) caused the [[Gaughan Amendment]] to be added to the [[WSFS Constitution]], prohibiting an artists from being nominated in both categories in the same year. |
Latest revision as of 05:06, 11 April 2020
Awarded September 3, 1967 by NYcon 3.
NYcon 3's categories were a major revision of the Hugo categories with half of them different from the relatively stable set used from Pittcon through Tricon. The major change was that Best Short Fiction was broken into Best Short Story and Best Novelette categories. and the Best Fan Writer and Best Fan Artist categories were created. Note that these innovations have lasted for nearly fifty years, now.
One oddity which did not last was an attempt to make the Hugo Award a professional-only award, and split off the two newly-created fan awards plus Best Fanzine into a separate category, the Pong Award, named after Bob Tucker's pseudonym Hoy Ping Pong. It wasn't that people objected to the association with Tucker, but to the separation of fan and pro and to the name Pong for the award. Fannish objections caused the committee to drop the idea, but not before the nomination ballot went out with the new name. By the time of the final ballot, the name had reverted to Hugo Awards.
Nycon 3 did not release standings after first place.
- Best Novel: The Moon is a Harsh Mistress by Robert A. Heinlein
- Best Novelette: "The Last Castle" by Jack Vance
- Best Short Story: "Neutron Star" by Larry Niven
- Best Dramatic Presentation: Star Trek - "The Menagerie"
- Best Professional Magazine: If ed. by Frederik Pohl
- Best Professional Artist: Jack Gaughan
- Best Fanzine: Niekas ed. by Ed Meskys and Felice Rolfe
- Best Fan Writer: Alexei Panshin
- Best Fan Artist: Jack Gaughan
Note: Jack Gaughan winning both Best Fan Artist and Best Professional Artist (legitimately -- he did both fan and pro art) caused the Gaughan Amendment to be added to the WSFS Constitution, prohibiting an artists from being nominated in both categories in the same year.
1966 | Hugos | 1968 | 1967 |
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