Difference between revisions of "1965 Hugos"
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− | + | The 1965 [[Hugo Awards]] were awarded by [[Robert Silverberg]] on August 30, 1965 by [[Loncon II]] at a ceremony at the convention. To save shipping costs, there was only one [[Hugo trophy]] at the convention which each winner got to hold in turn. | |
− | + | Loncon II's categories basically followed those of the previous year's [[Pacificon II]], including the one-year category [[Best Book Publisher]] which was never again awarded. When producing its nomination ballot, Loncon inadvertently left off [[Best Dramatic Presentation]], apparently taking its list from Pacificon II's final ballot which also left off Best Dramatic Presentation (due to insufficient nominations.) Protests were immediate and write-ins allowed the committee to include Best Dramatic Presentation on the final ballot, albeit with only two nominees. | |
[[Loncon II]] did not release standings after first place, and placed an unusually small number of nominees on the final ballot: 2 in one category, 3 in two more and only 4 in the rest. | [[Loncon II]] did not release standings after first place, and placed an unusually small number of nominees on the final ballot: 2 in one category, 3 in two more and only 4 in the rest. | ||
− | * [[1965 Best Novel Hugo|Best Novel | + | * [[1965 Best Novel Hugo|Best Novel]]: ''The Wanderer'' by [[Fritz Leiber]] |
− | * [[1965 Best Short Fiction Hugo|Best Short Fiction | + | * [[1965 Best Short Fiction Hugo|Best Short Fiction]]: "Soldier, Ask Not" by [[Gordon R. Dickson]] |
− | * [[1965 Best Dramatic Presentation Hugo|Best Dramatic Presentation | + | * [[1965 Best Dramatic Presentation Hugo|Best Dramatic Presentation]]: ''Dr. Strangelove'' |
− | * [[1965 Best Professional Magazine Hugo|Best Professional Magazine | + | * [[1965 Best Professional Magazine Hugo|Best Professional Magazine]]: ''[[Analog Science Fiction and Fact]]'' ed. by [[John W. Campbell, Jr.]] |
− | * [[1965 Best Professional Artist Hugo|Best Professional Artist | + | * [[1965 Best Professional Artist Hugo|Best Professional Artist]]: [[John Schoenherr]] |
− | * [[1965 Best Fanzine Hugo|Best Fanzine | + | * [[1965 Best Fanzine Hugo|Best Fanzine]]: ''[[Yandro]]'' ed. by [[Robert Coulson]] and [[Juanita Coulson]] |
− | * [[1965 Best SF Book Publisher Hugo|Best SF Book Publisher | + | * [[1965 Best SF Book Publisher Hugo|Best SF Book Publisher]]: [[Ballantine]] |
− | {{award | year=1965 | parent= | + | {{award | year=1965 | parent=Hugos}} |
[[Category:Hugos]] | [[Category:Hugos]] | ||
[[Category:World]] | [[Category:World]] |
Latest revision as of 07:15, 1 March 2022
The 1965 Hugo Awards were awarded by Robert Silverberg on August 30, 1965 by Loncon II at a ceremony at the convention. To save shipping costs, there was only one Hugo trophy at the convention which each winner got to hold in turn.
Loncon II's categories basically followed those of the previous year's Pacificon II, including the one-year category Best Book Publisher which was never again awarded. When producing its nomination ballot, Loncon inadvertently left off Best Dramatic Presentation, apparently taking its list from Pacificon II's final ballot which also left off Best Dramatic Presentation (due to insufficient nominations.) Protests were immediate and write-ins allowed the committee to include Best Dramatic Presentation on the final ballot, albeit with only two nominees.
Loncon II did not release standings after first place, and placed an unusually small number of nominees on the final ballot: 2 in one category, 3 in two more and only 4 in the rest.
- Best Novel: The Wanderer by Fritz Leiber
- Best Short Fiction: "Soldier, Ask Not" by Gordon R. Dickson
- Best Dramatic Presentation: Dr. Strangelove
- Best Professional Magazine: Analog Science Fiction and Fact ed. by John W. Campbell, Jr.
- Best Professional Artist: John Schoenherr
- Best Fanzine: Yandro ed. by Robert Coulson and Juanita Coulson
- Best SF Book Publisher: Ballantine
1964 | Hugos | 1966 | 1965 |
This is an award page. If you know something about it, such as who awarded it, who the winners were, what the criteria were, and when it was awarded, please add it! See Standards for Awards. |