Difference between revisions of "Dan Morgan"
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− | (1925 | + | (December 24, 1925 – November 4, 2011) |
− | '''Dan Morgan''' | + | '''Dan Morgan''' was a [[UK]] [[fan]], [[pro]] author, [[poet]] and professional guitarist active from the 1950s. |
+ | |||
+ | Morgan attended the [[Festivention]] in 1951 where he is pictured sitting next to his friend and later collaborator [[John Kippax]]. They had played in the same dance band, both as guitarists. He was a contributor to ''[[Sludge]]'' that same year. He attended a number of later conventions, including the [[London SF Con]] in 1952 of which [[Walt Willis]] said: | ||
+ | The final event was a showing of ''Metropolis'', which was in a way the best part of the official programme. This was because there was no incidental music to drown fan comment on the action, some of which was brilliant. Dan Morgan shone especially. When the hero suddenly mimed exaggerated alarm they way they do in silent films and dashed madly for the door Dan remarked 'First on the right'<ref>'[[The Harp in England]]' in ''[[Quandry]]'' #22 (July 1952).</ref>. | ||
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+ | Morgan was [[goh|guest of honour]] at [[Novacon 5]]. His speech there was published in ''[[Vector]]'' #72 (February 1976). | ||
+ | |||
+ | His first published genre story was 'Alien Analysis' in ''[[New Worlds]]'' #13 (January 1952) while his first novel, ''Cee-Tee Man'' was published in 1955. It was followed by a dozen others. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{fanzines}} | ||
+ | * ''[[SF Writer's Bulletin]]'' [1970-71] (#5–7) | ||
{{recognition}} | {{recognition}} | ||
− | * 1975 | + | * 1975 – [[Novacon 5]] |
+ | |||
+ | '''Links''' | ||
+ | * {{SFE|name=morgan_dan}} | ||
+ | * {{ISFDB|dan_morgan}} | ||
{{person | born=1925 | died=2011}} | {{person | born=1925 | died=2011}} | ||
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[[Category:pro]] | [[Category:pro]] | ||
[[Category:UK]] | [[Category:UK]] |
Latest revision as of 03:31, 20 September 2024
(December 24, 1925 – November 4, 2011)
Dan Morgan was a UK fan, pro author, poet and professional guitarist active from the 1950s.
Morgan attended the Festivention in 1951 where he is pictured sitting next to his friend and later collaborator John Kippax. They had played in the same dance band, both as guitarists. He was a contributor to Sludge that same year. He attended a number of later conventions, including the London SF Con in 1952 of which Walt Willis said:
The final event was a showing of Metropolis, which was in a way the best part of the official programme. This was because there was no incidental music to drown fan comment on the action, some of which was brilliant. Dan Morgan shone especially. When the hero suddenly mimed exaggerated alarm they way they do in silent films and dashed madly for the door Dan remarked 'First on the right'[1].
Morgan was guest of honour at Novacon 5. His speech there was published in Vector #72 (February 1976).
His first published genre story was 'Alien Analysis' in New Worlds #13 (January 1952) while his first novel, Cee-Tee Man was published in 1955. It was followed by a dozen others.
- SF Writer's Bulletin [1970-71] (#5–7)
Awards, Honors and GoHships:
- 1975 – Novacon 5
Links
Person | 1925—2011 |
This is a biography page. Please extend it by adding more information about the person, such as fanzines and apazines published, awards, clubs, conventions worked on, GoHships, impact on fandom, external links, anecdotes, etc. See Standards for People and The Naming of Names. |
- ↑ 'The Harp in England' in Quandry #22 (July 1952).