JOAN W CARRfrom Fancyclopedia 2
One of the more popular hoaxes in fannish history, which boasts a good
many. She was a femmefan, first born in the mind of HP (Sandy) Sanderson back
in October 1952. When he was posted to the Middle East, Sandy [a sergeant in
the British army] concocted with Frances Evans a plot against the male
members of the Northwest Science Fantasy Club (of Manchester, his home town).
Soon after arriving in North Africa he told them of meeting a WRAC [British
WAC] who took an interest in fandom. Later "she" wrote letters to various
Manchester fans, using a typer (Sandy never did) and signing "her" signature
in green with a special pen. Later, she came into contact with fans outside
of the original Northern group, and by May 1954 was well-known in
Anglofandom. It was generally assumed that she and Sandy would be married at
the end of their overseas tour. (One British femmefan worried a bit about
their future, remarking that Joan sounded like one of those ultra-masculine
sergeants the WRACs develop and would probably not make anybody a good wife.)
Meanwhile, back in England, Frances (who had been studying the reaction
among Anglofen while Sandy animated his creation in Egypt) had been in touch
with Ethel Lindsay, and had put forward the idea of uniting all the female
fans thru a magazine of their own. Joan "volunteered" to edit it, and so
FEMIZINE came into being. It was more popular than expected. Suddenly
femmefandom turned up plenty of talent that had previously been hidden. In
short order FEZ had a circulation of 200, with up to 50% letter returns -- an
amazing reader response. By March 1955 Ethel Lindsay had been brought into
the plot, Joan was known thruout fandom, and time was running short. JoCa had
grown out of all consideration of the original idea, and began to go
gafia.
FEZ was turned over to Pamela Bulmer (who produced issues 8&9) in July 1955,
and presently Joan had reduced her activity to OMPA only
and was slowing down there.
When the hoax was revealed it dealt British female fandom a jolt from
which it has yet to recover (1959). The fear of this had led Frances and
Ethel to decide that Joan should go gafia; Sandy started to take over Joan's
activities in his own name, spreading talk of a quarrel between himself and
Joan. Unfortunately, in May '56 somebody blew the gaff; Ron Bennett was
intending to create a mythical wife, also named "Joan", and someone in the
secret told him it had already been done. Hints and suggestions were flying
around the '56 Kettering convention, and it was decided to break the story in
FEZ 9.
Joan's name in the first place was taken from a box of Carr's biscuits and
from Carrs Mills, where a non-fan cousin of Sandy's (who later posed for
photos of "Joan") lived. It was chosen without any thought of the various
meanings that could be read into it and its contractions JoCa and JWC. It
says something for the differences between Yanks and Britons that many of
Sandy's Army acquaintances knew of his hoax yet didn't think there was
anything odd about it, even picking up "her" mail and holding it while Sandy
was on leave.
|