Saturday, September 12, 2020

1992: Atlanta Fantasy Fair Southside

In 1992, the Atlanta Fantasy Fair made the bold decision to leave downtown Atlanta. Actually, that decision was the result of forces far beyond the control of any Fantasy Fair anywhere; the 1988 Democratic National Convention took place in Atlanta in the summer of 1988 and it threw a wrench into the plans of every single trade show, festival, convention, and gathering that wanted to happen anywhere in the metro area.  Scheduling for every kind of show was wrecked for years to come. AFF lost their coveted Omni/WCC space in 1988, managed to get it back in 1990, then lost it again for the 1991 show. Convention space downtown was in demand, prices were rising, competition was fierce, and the Georgia International Convention Center down by the airport was eager for business. The GICC and the accompanying Hyatt - later a Sheraton - were built in 1985, and in 1992 the place still had that new facility gleam. This would be home for the next two Atlanta Fantasy Fairs.


AFF attendees were there for the jogging and tennis, I am so sure

Guests for the 1992 AFF included author Peter David, Flaming Carrot artist/writer Bob Burden, fantasy author Stephen R. Donaldson, Star Trek actor Colm Meaney, Star Trek and future Sex In The City star Kim Cattrall, and Aliens android Lance Henriksen, who cancelled his AFF appearance due to contractual obligations- he was shooting the canine horror movie Man's Best Friend, so I'm told. 



I was on staff this year, having recruited a crew of fellow anime nerds to handle the anime room. When we weren't screening screechy 1970s super robot epics to a bewildered audience, we were roaming the halls using the convention as a location for our goofball SF epic "The Ozone Commandos." Part One of this film is available to watch on YouTube



the Ozone Commandos burst in to blast the nerds (nerds at a different convention)

My recollection of 1992 is it felt really strange not having the AFF in downtown Atlanta. For suburbanites such as ourselves, that Omni-Hilton-Hyatt-Marriott nexus was part of the package, lending an excitement to the convention experience that the GICC, ten miles south of downtown, simply did not have. Sure, the GICC was convenient to the airport. I guess if you lived in College Park or Hapeville it was wonderful. But for the rest of us, it was a bit more of a hike down to Riverdale Rd, where the GICC sat among the pine trees and industrial parks south of the airport. 


AFF 1992 crowd - note the AFF jacket and the Buckaroo Banzai headband
 

Dining options were limited to the Ruby Tuesday's across the street, if you didn't feel like driving over to Old National Highway and eating a late night breakfast while staring at the giant display of pies and cakes in the diner at Old National & Sullivan that isn't there any more. 


the 1992 AFF industrial vendors warehouse 


The fans grumbled some. I remember seeing the same look of "where the hell are we" on a lot of attendees' faces as they opened their car doors and gazed at this outpost of fandom set among the rolling hills of what, once you get south of Hartsfield, feels less north and more central Georgia. The grumbling intensified as the AFF congoers learned Henriksen wasn't coming. I had particular sympathy for the crew of a minivan that had decorated their windows with Henriksen-themed messages. Who knew he had such devoted fans, and what a bummer for them!


overhead pic of industrial vendors warehouse


I do remember some hallway drama as one of the AFF directors found out another, competing convention was going to host a room party in their room at the Hyatt, and it became a how dare they, this aggression will not stand, man, sort of moment. The AFF was in a transitional phase that year and not just transitioning down I-85. The ballistic arc of the festival's growth had reached its apogee and was now gently bending downwards. Competition between conventions is real, and when fans start having more fun at other shows, your show had better find something fun to give the fans, or start looking at smaller facilities. 


Hardworking AFF events staff

The AFF at the time seemed to be staffed by two different sets of people - a crew of younger fans who'd grown up with the show and wanted to kick it up a notch, expanding into new events and areas, and an older administrative circle that was mostly interested in selling shirts and vendors tables, meeting low-level Hollywood types, and otherwise not rocking the boat. The AFF had lost its contacts with the major comic book companies, didn't have the knowledge base, the budget, or the interest to push the show in new directions, and was seemingly content to deliver guests other conventions didn't want, in venues other conventions didn't want. That's not a strategy for success. 


AFF costume contest crowd


In the meantime there was enough of a crowd at the 1992 AFF to make things seem like business as usual, for a little while anyway. The convention would hold its 1992 and 1993 shows at the GICC. In 1994 the Atlanta Fantasy Fair would move to the exact opposite side of Atlanta, to the Crowne Plaza at Perimeter Mall, subsequently wrapping things up at the Castlegate in 1995, just in time for Anime Weekend Atlanta to have its first show at the Castlegate later that year. 


gamers in 1992, gaming

Coincidentally, our anime convention would continue to follow in AFF's footsteps, holding AWA 3 and 4 at the Century Center site of AFF's 1979 show. And in 2001 and 2002 AWA would find itself down at the Georgia International Convention Center and its attendant Sheraton, formerly the Hyatt. The facility hadn't changed much in ten years, it was more or less the right size for three and a half thousand anime fans to get together, even if that Ruby Tuesday's was still awful. 


hard to read the mood of the crowd at this 1992 AFF event. Sullen? Confused? Belligerent?

AWA might have stuck around there for another year or so. However, the GICC informed AWA that the convention center and the hotel were both about to be demolished to make way for a new runway at Hartsfield-Jackson Airport. Not to worry, a new GICC was being constructed a few miles away on the other side of I-285. Would that suit AWA? Well, turns out that new GICC wasn't going to have a hotel attached to it at the present time, and that was a deal-killer for the anime con. Probably a deal-killer for any other fan convention, to be honest, where half the fun of the show are late night room parties and social gatherings, hard to do in a convention center that shuts its doors at 7pm. At any rate, that new GICC wouldn't wind up opening until 2009. 





the ghost town GICC today (okay, 2012)

The new GICC eventually got some hotels nearby, but AWA moved north to the Waverly and the Cobb Galleria Convention Center in 2003 and has been there ever since. In the meantime, what of the former GICC and the Sheraton? Apparently Hartsfield-Jackson didn't really need that runway extension. Both buildings are still standing and have been used for a wide variety of purposes in the past decade - housing Katrina refugees and becoming a movie soundstage for several different film productions, including parts of Avengers: Infinity War. Things have come full circle, I suppose. 


catch the excitement, I guess, if you want to

If you want to experience a little bit of AFF 1992, please check out Christine Klimshuk's video of the convention and her award-winning costume contest presentation!  Thanks to Christine and to Matt Murray for some of the images used in this post.

-Dave Merrill



I said LIVE LONG AND PROSPER, dammit



Saturday, June 27, 2020

Atlanta Fantasy Fair 1987 photos



1987 saw the 13th gathering of the tribes under the banner of the Atlanta Fantasy Fair, meeting in downtown Atlanta at the Omni Hotel and the World Congress Center. Recently my pal Lloyd Carter, himself no stranger to the world of conventions (we started AWA together) unearthed a roll of film he shot at the 1987 AFF,  and he was kind enough to scan 'em in and send them my way. 



Here Star Trek's Nichelle Nichols entertains the AFF crowd with stories and songs from her days on board the Starship Enterprise. Somebody warn her not to do "Star Trek V."



Caroline Munro has faced interstellar villainy in "Starcrash", international intrigue in "The Spy Who Loved Me", the wrath of Dracula in "Dracula AD 1972", the forces of black magic in "Sinbad And The Eye Of The Tiger", and the lustful gaze of Adam Ant in the video for "Goody Two-Shoes." Here she meets what might be her greatest challenge in what I believe is Herb from the accounting department (No offense, guy - I know everybody looked kind of square at 1980s conventions).


Out of the nightmare realm of horror and special effects rises Tom Savini, here to disgust and repel and amaze in equal doses. At this point he had probably wrapped on "Creepshow 2" and was knee-deep in the "Tales From The Darkside" TV series. Not sure what his little buddy there was featured in, but he's definitely creeping me out. 


From the world of comics, DC editor Julius Schwartz lurks behind a table in the lower meeting rooms of the Omni, opposite the Marietta St. drop-off area where your parents would let you out of the station wagon. Schwartz rose from 1930s science fiction fandom to decades helming characters like The Flash, Green Lantern, Hawkman, Batman and Superman. 



Here Julie hams it up for the camera. Unfortunately, Julie's sense of whimsy extended to the occasional unwanted physical contact with female fans and pros, one of the reasons we use the irony quotes around the phrase "good old days."



Marvel editor Tom DeFalco, here shown in maximum 1980s cosplay, is no doubt thinking of how he spearheaded the Archie Digest line when he worked for Archie Comics in the 1970s, thereby ensuring children would continue to read comic books even after the rest of the industry would move to direct distribution for adult collectors. At this point in history DeFalco was in fact Editor-in-Chief of Marvel Comics, all part of his long-term plan to write the "Maximum Carnage" Spider-Man storyline.


I believe this is Louise and Walt Simonson discussing both Walt's groundbreaking work on Thor and Louise's groundbreaking work editing X-Men and X-Factor and writing New Mutants and Red Sonja, and how they both look forward to cameos in the Thor movie that will be made in twenty four years. The man on the right is unidentified at this time. 


Also in a similar World Congress Center exhibit hall is Tom DeFalco, Marvel writer and former EIC Archie Goodwin, and Unidentified Glasses-Wearing Man holding forth on an important topic. Let's say the Iran-Contra scandal. 


Of these two panelists,  I know one of them - superstar artist Bill Sienkiewicz seen on the right - is definitely dressed for the Atlanta summer, which would be great if he was outside. However, he's in a meeting room at a downtown convention facility, which means the AC is cranked and the temperature is probably sixty-five degrees, so he's probably shivering.  I don't know who the other fellow is, but I'm going to assume he worked for Marvel Comics in some capacity.  (Thanks to AFF veteran Scott W. for the Sienkiewicz ID!)


I wanna say the guy on the right is Elfquest publisher Richard Pini. and I have no idea who the guy on the left is. A balding white guy with glasses and a close trimmed beard? That's the face of the comic book industry in the 1980s. 

Looking at these photos 33 years later (!!) it's striking at how.... boring the attendees look. Everybody's in golf shirts or button-down business clothes. I know there were costumers (we didn't call them "cosplayers" back then) but they weren't as prevalent as they'd later become.  The cargo shorts and T-shirts that would be the American Male uniform had yet to take over.  In a few years, we'd see more young people start attending conventions and subsequently more graphic Ts, more skater shorts, crazier hair, and the sort of hall-costume culture we now take for granted would begin to be seen. But in 1987 things were still pretty square. 

I do want to thank Lloyd Carter again for these photos, and ask everyone two questions - 1. if you know who the unidentified people in these photos are, let me know, and 2, if you have any AFF photos or memorabilia yourself, please send those scans or pix my way at terebifunhouse@gmail.com, thank you!



Thanks to 7-Tardis-7 (deep in Center Neptune Gallifrey, no doubt) for the 1987 AFF lenticular pinback badge image!