Doctor Who Appreciation Society: Difference between revisions

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{{you may|Doctor Who Appreciation Society (Doctormania)|n1=the fictional society from the comic book ''Doctormania''}}
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'''The Doctor Who Appreciation Society''' or DWAS was a non-profit making body formed in 1976 with 70 members. By 1982, it had some 1,700 members.
'''The Doctor Who Appreciation Society''' or DWAS, is a non-profit making organisation and the longest running ''[[Doctor Who]]'' fan club in the world. For many years it was recognised as the official face of Doctor Who fandom by the BBC production office and later by BBC Worldwide although it was never actually licensed. It now operates independently of the BBC. It is run by a committee of volunteers known as the DWAS Executive.


It was the only ''Doctor Who'' fan club officially recognised by the BBC. The BBC's support was largely a way of channelling fan interest; it even required [[John Nathan-Turner]], the then producer, to have two secretaries ([[Jane Judge]] and Fiona ?{{Fact}}).
The Society publishes a monthly print magazine for its members called 'Celestial Toyroom'. It also has an online eMagazine called Cosmic Masque, available to everyone via the Society website at dwasonline.co.uk, and once a year produces 'The Celestial Toyroom Annual. In 2020 the DWAS announced its intention to return the fan magazine 'TARDIS' to print. This title started in 1976 before the Society itself and ceased publication in 1998, aside from once-off special in 2003.


A twelve member executive committee governed the society, which had a co-ordinator.
The world's first Doctor Who Convention was presented by DWAS in 1977 and this led in later years to 'Panopticon' - which for many years was the premier UK Doctor Who event until other rivals such as 'Phoenix' and "Manopticon' came onto the scene.


Writers [[David Saunders]] and [[David J. Howe]] have both been co-ordinators for the Society.
Following a financial crisis caused by failure to register for VAT in the late 1980s/1990s Panopticon and the Society's more commercial activities were hived off to a limited company called 'Dominitemporal Services Ltd' which was in turn 'taken private' by some of the directors a few years later leaving DWAS with a minority holding. In response to this a later Executive Committee of 2000 formed its own company 'Space Rocket Ltd' to undertake a similar role, ensuring that it always remains under the Society's control by incorporating it as 'limited by guarantee' meaning there were no shares to distribute.


The Society ran the [[PanoptiCon]] series of conventions for at least twenty-five years.<ref>[http://www.dwasonline.co.uk/conventions Doctor Who Appreciation Society - Conventions]</ref><ref>[http://doctorwho.org.nz/archive/tsv36/panopticon93.html Panopticon '93]</ref><ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=NYBKAQAAQBAJ&pg=PT146 Adventures With the Wife in Space: Living With Doctor Who by Neil Perryman]</ref>
Since 2016 Space Rocket Ltd has presented 'The Capitol' on behalf of DWAS - currently the Society's flagship event.


Following [[Nicholas Courtney]]'s death in 2011, [[Colin Baker]] succeeded Courtney as Honorary President of the Society.
The members of DWAS elected [[Jon Pertwee]] as their Honorary President in 1992. Following Pertwee's death in 1996 he was succeeded by his friend and colleague [[Nicholas Courtney]]; Courtney, after his own death in 2011, was replaced by [[Colin Baker]].


== Membership ==
== Membership ==
For an annual fee, members received a membership card and a monthly newsletter entitled ''[[The Celestial Toyroom (fanzine)|The Celestial Toyroom]]''.
For an annual fee, members received a membership card and a monthly magazine entitled ''[[The Celestial Toyroom (fanzine)|The Celestial Toyroom]]''. Discounts are also offered on Society's events, merchandise and publications.


== Other publications ==
== Other publications ==
The Society also produced a bi-monthly magazine called ''Tardis'' that featured articles and photographs and ''Cosmic Masque'' that contained fan fiction.
The Society also produces a quarterly fiction and reviews magazine 'Cosmic Masque' as a free download from its website and once a year 'The Celestial Toyroom Annual' is available as both a print copy and download. TARDIS is a features driven journal and was re-launched by DWAS in 2020.<ref>https://www.doctorwhonews.net/2020/07/tardis-magazine-released.html</ref>


== Footnotes ==
== Footnotes ==
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== External links ==
== External links ==
{{Official website|www.dwasonline.co.uk}}
{{Official website|www.dwasonline.co.uk}}
{{twitter|dwas63}}
{{twitter|dwasonline}}
{{facebook|dwasonline}}
{{instagram|dwasonline}}


[[Category:Fandom]]
[[Category:Fandom]]

Latest revision as of 20:38, 7 September 2022

RealWorld.png
Real worldStub.png
DWAS logo.jpg

The Doctor Who Appreciation Society or DWAS, is a non-profit making organisation and the longest running Doctor Who fan club in the world. For many years it was recognised as the official face of Doctor Who fandom by the BBC production office and later by BBC Worldwide although it was never actually licensed. It now operates independently of the BBC. It is run by a committee of volunteers known as the DWAS Executive.

The Society publishes a monthly print magazine for its members called 'Celestial Toyroom'. It also has an online eMagazine called Cosmic Masque, available to everyone via the Society website at dwasonline.co.uk, and once a year produces 'The Celestial Toyroom Annual. In 2020 the DWAS announced its intention to return the fan magazine 'TARDIS' to print. This title started in 1976 before the Society itself and ceased publication in 1998, aside from once-off special in 2003.

The world's first Doctor Who Convention was presented by DWAS in 1977 and this led in later years to 'Panopticon' - which for many years was the premier UK Doctor Who event until other rivals such as 'Phoenix' and "Manopticon' came onto the scene.

Following a financial crisis caused by failure to register for VAT in the late 1980s/1990s Panopticon and the Society's more commercial activities were hived off to a limited company called 'Dominitemporal Services Ltd' which was in turn 'taken private' by some of the directors a few years later leaving DWAS with a minority holding. In response to this a later Executive Committee of 2000 formed its own company 'Space Rocket Ltd' to undertake a similar role, ensuring that it always remains under the Society's control by incorporating it as 'limited by guarantee' meaning there were no shares to distribute.

Since 2016 Space Rocket Ltd has presented 'The Capitol' on behalf of DWAS - currently the Society's flagship event.

The members of DWAS elected Jon Pertwee as their Honorary President in 1992. Following Pertwee's death in 1996 he was succeeded by his friend and colleague Nicholas Courtney; Courtney, after his own death in 2011, was replaced by Colin Baker.

Membership[[edit] | [edit source]]

For an annual fee, members received a membership card and a monthly magazine entitled The Celestial Toyroom. Discounts are also offered on Society's events, merchandise and publications.

Other publications[[edit] | [edit source]]

The Society also produces a quarterly fiction and reviews magazine 'Cosmic Masque' as a free download from its website and once a year 'The Celestial Toyroom Annual' is available as both a print copy and download. TARDIS is a features driven journal and was re-launched by DWAS in 2020.[1]

Footnotes[[edit] | [edit source]]

External links[[edit] | [edit source]]