Dreamwatch
was a British magazine covering science fiction and fantasy films, books and television programmes.
[1]
Published monthly by Gary Leigh (July 1983 to January 2001) and then
Titan Magazines
(2001 to 2007), it was a leading genre entertainment magazine, competing with
SFX
and
Cinescape
in the genre magazine market.
Overview
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The publication began life in July 1983
[1]
as an amateur
fanzine
dedicated to the popular
science-fiction television
series
Doctor Who
, and was published under the title
Doctor Who Bulletin
. In this form, it became well known for taking a generally critical tone towards the later seasons of the programme, particularly the work of producer
John Nathan-Turner
, who was subjected to several personal attacks in its pages. However, it became popular with some fans due to its frequent reporting of news concerning the show before it was released through official sources, and as an alternative viewpoint to the officially sanctioned
Doctor Who Magazine
or
Celestial Toyroom
, the newsletter of the
Doctor Who Appreciation Society
. There were, however, occasional embarrassing errors, such as the printing of an obituary for actor
Kevin Stoney
in 1986, who was still alive and after the article's appearance would happily sign copies for fans at conventions. The fanzine also gained a reputation for being sometimes too willing to report rumour as fact.
In 1989, the fanzine expanded to cover other genre films and television series as well as
Doctor Who
, and the title was changed to
DreamWatch Bulletin
so that the popular abbreviation
DWB
would remain intact. In 1994, it was turned into a fully professional newsstand magazine: the title was shortened to simply
Dreamwatch
, and the numbering of the magazine was restarted from issue 1.
The original fanzine was founded and edited by Gary Levy, who later changed his name to Gary Leigh. He edited the first hundred issues, before handing over editorial reins first to David Gibbs (issues 101?110) and then to Anthony Brown (111?130), after which the professional version was launched (with numbering beginning again at issue 1, and with Anthony Clark and then Paul Simpson as editors until issue 71). Leigh returned as editor with issue 72, aided by co-editor Simon J. Gerard who worked on the title on a day-to-day basis. Leigh retained ownership of the title until 2001, when he sold the magazine to
Titan Magazines
, part of the Titan Entertainment Group owned by
Nick Landau
. Gerard moved across to Titan with
Dreamwatch
and took the role of Contributing Editor.
Brian J. Robb became Editor/Managing Editor in June 2001 (issue 81) and continued through to September 2003 (issue 108) which marked
DWB
'
s 20th continuous year of publication. Former Deputy Editor David Bassom served as Editor from issue 109 to 123, and launched the stand-alone US edition with the help of Deputy Editor Matthew Chapman. Robb became Editor/Managing Editor of
Dreamwatch
once more from January 2005 (issue 124) until October 2006 (issue 145). Former deputy editor Richard Matthews then became editor for a few issues (until issue 148) before the editorship returned to Robb until issue 150, which was the last print edition,
[1]
published on 25 January 2007 (issue 280 if counted from the debut issue in July 1983).
At the end of January 2007, the magazine became a web-only publication entitled Total Sci-Fi, offering SF news and features and
Dreamwatch
/
DWB
archive at www.totalscifionline.com. The website was edited by Matt McAllister, and counted many former
Dreamwatch
writers among its contributors. It was placed on indefinite hiatus in 2011.
References
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