The last (and only) time the World Science Fiction Convention was held in Seattle, A Canticle for Leibowitz won the Hugo Award for Best Novel. In the Best Short Fiction category, rising young star Poul Anderson gained his first Hugo, for “The Longest Voyage”. The Immortal Trio of Robert Heinlein, Isaac Asimov and Arthur C. Clarke were all actively at work. The Space Needle did not exist; the Smith Tower, at 522 feet, was still the tallest building between the Mississippi River and Japan. The four-year-old Boeing 707 had recently introduced Americans to jet travel. Neither the first nor the last man had yet landed on the Moon.
Seacon, the 1961 Worldcon, drew good reviews, but that generation of Seattle fandom had no interest in repeating the experience. After a two-decade lapse, new-fledged fen bid for the 1981 Worldcon. Pitted against Denver, they didn’t do badly, finishing second in the first round of vote counting and almost forcing a redistribution of the third place votes (cast for a weak Los Angeles bid).
After another long interval, a new Seattle bid was put together for 2002, competing against San Francisco (which transformed after the balloting into San José). This one didn’t make it to the polls. The bidcomm couldn’t get along with the manager of the projected headquarters hotel (or he couldn’t get along with them) and dropped out of the race.
The latest Seattle effort was for 2011. I use the past tense, because last Saturday bid chairman Bobbie DuFault posted this sad announcement on the SMOFs e-mail list:
It is with grave regret and a deep disappointment that I must announce that the Seattle bid has to pull out of the race to host the Worldcon in 2011. This is due to an unforeseen event and our inability to reach a formal first option agreement with our preferred facilities. We had initial options on facilities, but when it came time to reduce them to formal writing, we found that our preferred facilities had groups willing to make the financial commitment ahead of us. Seattle is such a popular destination for conventions that all of the reasonable dates (early August through early September) already have groups that have firmer commitments than we do.
After examining the options and alternatives, consulting with our respected advisors and exploring any number of other possibilities we have determined that there are just no viable alternatives, which make sense for the fannish community available to us. We do not want to host the Worldcon in a venue and situation that would prove to be less than World class. In this economy, it is refreshing to know that Seattle remains a popular destination for conventions and tourists even if it is one of the saddest things I can think of at the moment.
I want to personally thank all of the fannish community, our supporters, my advisors, friends and family for giving so completely of yourselves over the last several years. I can personally not think of anyone I would not have wanted to produce this event with other than you – You all gave so much and went so far to make this happen. Thank you for everything!
We will be reviewing future opportunities with our potential facilities with an eye toward bidding for a subsequent year.
One of the banes of Worldcon bidding is that bid committees that haven’t yet won don’t have the wherewithal to put down substantial deposits on their venues. In 1986, the site selection lead time was changed from two to three years, largely in hopes of mitigating this problem. It didn’t work very well, as the subsequent travails of the D.C. in 1992 bid (withdrawn after another group preempted their main hotel), Baltimore in 1998 (forced to change its date) and San Francisco in 2002 (exiled to San José) illustrate. Now we are back to a two-year cycle, and nothing has changed.
There will, of course, be a Worldcon. Reno in 2011 filed its bid paperwork on time and is now unopposed. It will be the first Worldcon ever held in a casino. Alas for blackjack mavens (and any passing Frenchmen), I’ve been informed that the house doesn’t accept “surrender”. Thank Ghu the tables won’t distract me from the con!
Sorry, Kevin. My memory is slipping.
Posted by: Tom Veal | Tuesday, February 10, 2009 at 10:12 AM
Posted by: Kevin Standlee | Tuesday, February 10, 2009 at 09:51 AM