Festivention

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From left, Mike Tealby, Derek Pickles, Fred Robinson, Walter Willis, Bob Foster, Vincent Clarke and Ken Bulmer at the International Science Fantasy Con, 1951.

Eastercon 2.5, known as Festivention or Festival Convention and the International Science Fantasy Convention, was held in London over Whitsun, May 10–14, 1951, at the White Horse and Royal Hotel in London, though the formal programme was Saturday and Sunday only. The GoHs were Forrest J Ackerman, Wendayne Ackerman, and Lyell Crane. The committee were E. J. Carnell, Charles Duncombe, A. Vincent Clarke, Audrey Lovett, F. E. Arnold, Jim Ratigan, Ken Bulmer, Fred Brown, and Ted Tubb. Between 200 and 300 fans attended. Memberships were 2/6 (two shillings and six pence) to join the convention society and tickets were 7/6 for each day and included a buffet.

Festivention was intended as an international convention and also called the European International Convention. It was held at the normal time for Eastercon in place of it and no Eastercon was officially held that year. It was however included on the canonical list of Eastercons produced for Eastercon 22 in 1971 and only promoted out of the list in 1989 following the discovery of Cytricon III, if nothing else to spare the numerical embarrassment of having Eastercon 22 be the 23rd Eastercon.

The name was a tie-in to the Festival of Britain that year. While it clearly wasn't a Worldcon, it was more international than Worldcons to date and contemporary fanwriters did occasionally use the term, for instance Walt Willis in Quandry 8 ('If you are in London for the festival (and the World Science Fiction Convention, May 10th to 13th, 1951)...'), 9 ('Ackerman reported to be coming to the World Convention in London in May...') and 10 ('Further articles in the series "The Other SF" in this column will be delayed until after the World Convention in London in May...').

Attendees[edit]

Approximately 200 people attended the convention but again there is no published membership list. The following are people named in one of the convention reports, who appear in photos and/or whose names appear on an extensively signed copy of the programme book.

Named marked * are family members of attendees who it's thought they were not fans per se.

NOTE: this is an ongoing update. Unlinked names are being checked to see if they are already here under variants

  1. Ben Abas
  2. Barbara Abas *
  3. Forry Ackerman
  4. Wendayne Ackerman
  5. Bruce Angrave
  6. Frank Arnold
  7. P. A. Astley
  8. B. A. Baker
  9. Eric Bentcliffe
  10. Sid Birchby
  11. John Birchby
  12. Fred Brown
  13. Daphne Buckmaster
  14. Ron Buckmaster
  15. Ken Bulmer
  16. Bert Campbell
  17. Mrs Campbell *
  18. Paul Capon
  19. Ted Carnell
  20. M. Chambaz
  21. Mdm. Chambaz *
  22. Ken Chapman
  23. George Charters
  24. Vin¢ Clarke
  25. Arthur C. Clarke
  26. Dave Cohen
  27. Robert Conquest
  28. Mrs Conquest *
  29. Michael Corper
  30. Lyell Crane
  31. John Keir Cross
  32. C. D'Alessio
  33. Rick Dalton
  34. Mimi Dalton
  35. Ron Deacon
  36. Philip Duerr
  37. Charles Duncombe
  38. Fred Fairless
  39. Frank Fears
  40. Bob Foster
  41. J. Fowler
  42. Les Flood
  43. Georges Gallet
  44. Kerry Gaulder
  45. W. Arthur Gibson
  46. Walter Gillings
  47. Dave Griffiths
  48. John Beynon Harris
  49. Mr Hill[1]
  50. George Hay
  51. Arthur F. Hillman
  52. Alan Hunter
  53. Joyce Hunter *
  54. Lee Jacobs
  55. Leslie J. Johnson
  56. K. T. Johnstone
  57. Ralph A. Keyes
  58. John Kippax
  59. Max Leviten
  60. Audrey Lovett
  61. Prof. A. M. Low
  62. Colling Leybourn
  63. Doug Mayer
  64. Frank Milnes
  65. Lew Mordecai
  66. Dan Morgan
  67. Mrs Murray
  68. Sigvard Östlund
  69. Mrs Ostlund *
  70. Terry Overton
  71. Mary Patchett
  72. Peter Phillips
  73. Derek Pickles
  74. Mavis Pickles
  75. Owen Plumridge
  76. Ken Paynter
  77. Jim Ratigan
  78. Peter Ridley
  79. Fred Robinson
  80. J. Michael Rosenblum
  81. Alan Shalders
  82. C. Sharpe
  83. D. Sharpe
  84. Bob Shaw
  85. Walter Shaw
  86. Mike Tealby
  87. Bill Temple
  88. Tony Thorne
  89. Ted Tubb
  90. Norman Wansborough
  91. Norman Weedall
  92. A. Wenham
  93. R. V. Weston
  94. P. A. Weston
  95. James White
  96. A. E. "Taffy" Williams
  97. Walt Willis
  98. Madeleine Willis
  99. Sam Youd

Additional known attendees include Ben Abas's brother (name unknown), somebody whose name could be Leonard Borston but the name is unclear and he isn't otherwise mentioned in fannish records, and somebody whose name appears to be Daphne Mac-something.


Conreport by Ted Carnell[edit]

in Bloomington News Letter (July 1951, which see for photos and International Fantasy Award details):

London, England: Over May 11th to the 14th, between 200 and 300 professional and amateur enthusiasts of science-fiction, rep­resenting eight countries, met in the ballroom of the Royal Hotel (London), to celebrate the first International Science-Fiction Convention ever held. Highlight of this largest - ever British gathering was a surprise award promulgated by the London Circle for the best fiction book and best technical book of 1950. The panel of critics chose George R. Stewart's EARTH ABIDES (Random House) for fiction, and Willy Ley & Chesley Bonestell's CONQUEST OF SPACE (Viking Press) for the technical award. Forrest Ackerman accepted the two awards on behalf of his countrymen.

The awards, conceived only two weeks prior to the convention, went on the drawing board immediately and a twelve-inch spaceship taken from the Bonestell design on the February 1951 GALAXY cover has been approved; It will be mounted on an oak base complete with ornate lighter. Actual awards will be fashioned of heavy chrome for the fiction class, and bronze for the technical. Owing to the shortage of time, exact replicas were used in place of the models — not expected to be ready for some weeks. It is intended that these awards will be made annually, and planned to embrace other fields of science-fiction, including the films. A special Fantasy Fund Award has been opened whereby any­ one may donate. At present, the Award Fund Committee are using the Nova Publications address. 

The Sunday afternoon (13th) session included a three-hour coverage of the S-F fields by all overseas guests; Crane, Canada; Ackerman and Jacobs, the States; Gallet, France; Abas, Holland; Ostlund, Sweden; Willis, Ireland; Paynter, Australia; and Arnold for Britain. (Cpl. Jacobs flew in from his station in Versailles, France.) In addition, Frank Arnold reported on the Italian and Russian fields, while Wendayne Ackerman spoke on the German. A proposal was made by Lyell Crane to set up an International S-F movement outside the United States and the United Kingdom.

The convention followed similar lines to American affairs in that two auctions proved it a moneymaker. There were debates and discussions by prominent professionals, and Milton Rothman's two soap-operas "Life Can be Horrible" and "Who Goes Where?" were re-scripted for British consumption with outstanding success. These and other major items were wire-recorded. Wendayne Acker­man gave an outline of dianetics to a packed hall.

Film shows each evening included Doyle's feature, "The Lost World", Tucker's cutting-room floor epic, "Monsters of the Moon", three short films brought over by Ackerman, and a technicolor rocket film supplied by Arthur C. Clarke. Science-fiction "art" vied with Victorian paintings adorning the walls.



Convention
1951
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.

  1. Reports identify a speaker with an Australian accent referred to only as 'Mr Mill'. Chris Nelson believes this was J. M. Walsh.