Canadian National Magazine Awards
The National Magazine Awards Foundation (NMAF) is a bilingual, not-for-profit institution whose mission is to recognize excellence in the content and creation of Canadian magazines through an annual program of awards. The National Magazine Awards gala takes place each June in Toronto. Each year the NMAF relies on over 100 volunteer judges to evaluate the entries and award gold and silver winners in the written, visual, integrated and special categories.
A 20-member board of directors mostly drawn from the Canadian magazine industry governs the NMAF. The current president of the board of directors of the NMAF is Nino Di Cara, Executive Vice President, Content Marketing for Bookmark (formerly Spafax).
History
In 1976 Andrew MacFarlane, Dean of Journalism at the University of Western Ontario (UWO), was trying to revive the university's recently defunct President's Medal for Canadian Magazine Journalism. His original idea was to create a new award divided into English and French counterparts. But MacFarlane eventually developed a proposal for a series of magazine awards, whose salient features were that the program would be bilingual – and therefore truly national – and would recognize individual excellence in the many aspects of the magazine industry – writers, illustrators, editors, photographers and art directors.
MacFarlane together with John S. Crosbie, president of the Magazine Association of Canada, secured the participation of the Canadian Periodical Publishers Association (CPPA), representing 193 Canadian magazines, and CPPA's former president Michael de Pencier. MacFarlane reached out to his counterpart at Université Laval, Roger de la Garde, Alan Edmunds, head of the Periodical Writers Association of Canada (PWAC), and veteran newsman Pierre Berton, among others. As the collective effort began to take shape across the country, by the spring of 1977 the National Magazine Awards had developed a clear mandate.
On 14 November 1977, National Magazine Awards Foundation received its charter of non-profit foundation status from the Province of Ontario.
The first awards
There were more than 1300 entries to the first National Magazine Awards for the year 1977. 62 judges evaluated the entries and awarded winners in 14 categories. The first National Magazine Awards gala was held on Thursday, 11 May 1978 at the Hotel Toronto.
Pierre Berton emceed the event, where the 660 guests dined and danced to Jack Collins and his five-piece band. Before presenting the awards, Berton proclaimed to the audience, "In a bold departure from tradition, there are to be no thank you speeches. We can do that because we are giving money, not some cheap statuette."[1] If any winner started to talk on stage, Berton reportedly waved a large hook in the speaker’s direction.
Awards were handed down in 14 categories (with separate French- and English-language winners for the President’s Award for General Magazine Articles). 11 different magazines won awards. The NMAF also honoured outstanding achievement by a magazine: L'actualité (French) and Harrowsmith (English) took the awards.
Major winners of the National Magazine Awards
The now-defunct Saturday Night is the all-time leader in awards, with 129 gold awards. Toronto Life magazine leads all current publications with 108 gold awards. Writer Robert Fulford is the all-time individual leader with 14 gold awards.
Categories
The NMAF has a total of 25 awards categories, in addition to 3 special awwards.
Written Categories: Long-Form Feature Writing Feature Writing Best Short Feature Columns Essays Fiction Investigative Reporting One of a Kind Personal Journalism Poetry Profiles Service Journalism Professional Article Best New Magazine Writer
Visual Categories: Art Direction of an Entire Issue Art Direction of a Single Article Illustrations Photography: Photojournalism & Photo Essay Photography:Portraits Photography: Lifestyle Best New Illustrator or Photographer
Integrated Categories: Magazine Covers Editorial Package Service Editorial Package Words & Pictures
Special Categories: Foundation Award for Outstanding Achievement Foundation Award for International Impact Magazine of the Year Magazine of the Year
Magazine of the Year
Each year the National Magazine Awards concludes with the naming of Canada’s Magazine of the Year. Previous winners are:
- 1982: Equinox
- 1983: Vancouver Magazine
- 1984: Saturday Night
- 1985: Toronto Life
- 1986: Quill & Quire
- 1987: Report on Business Magazine
- 1988: Applied Arts Quarterly
- 1989: Toronto Life
- 1990: West Magazine
- 1991: Idler
- 1992: Cottage Life
- 1993: Owl and Chickadee
- 1994: Canadian Art
- 1995: Canadian House & Home
- 1996: Canadian Living
- 1997: Vancouver Magazine
- 1998: Adbusters
- 1999: Chatelaine
- 2000: Azure
- 2001: Canadian Geographic
- 2002: Outpost Magazine
- 2003: Border Crossings
- 2004: Maisonneuve
- 2005: Maclean's
- 2006: The Walrus
- 2007: Toronto Life
- 2008: AlbertaViews
- 2009: Up Here
- 2010: MoneySense
- 2011: Maisonneuve
- 2012: Corporate Knights
- 2013: Cottage Life
- 2014: Nouveau Projet
- 2015:Maisonneuve
Outstanding Achievement
Each year since 1990 the NMAF has awarded the Foundation Award for Outstanding Achievement, which recognizes an individual's innovation and creativity through contributions to the Canadian magazine industry. The winners since 1990 are:
- 1990 Prue Hemelrijk
- 1991 Michael de Pencier
- 1992 Lloyd Hodgkinson
- 1993 Barbara Moon
- 1994 Don Obe
- 1995 Jean Paré
- 1996 Catherine Keachie
- 1997 James Ireland
- 1998 Robert Fulford
- 1999 Lynn Cunningham
- 2000 Peter C. Newman
- 2001 Ken Rodmell
- 2002 Al Zikovitz
- 2003 Sally Armstrong
- 2004 Paul Jones
- 2005 John Macfarlane
- 2006 Neville Gilfoy
- 2007 Charles Oberdorf
- 2008 Cynthia Brouse
- 2009 Terry Sellwood
- 2010 D.B. Scott
- 2011 Heather Robertson
- 2012 Stephen Trumper
- 2013 Kim Jernigan
- 2014 Michael Fox
- 2015 Kim Pittaway
Other information
The submissions process for the National Magazine Awards is generally open from December until the second week of January. Nominations are announced in the spring, and the awards gala is held in June in Toronto.