
TodaysParent.com, the online companion of Today’s Parent magazine, was named Magazine of the Year—Digital. Heather Robertson received the Foundation Award for Outstanding Achievement. Liam Casey was named Best New Magazine Writer and The Coveteur was named Best New Visual Creator (see more below).
The Grid – new to the NMAs this year after launching in May 2011 – won 4 Gold and 2 Silver awards. Toronto Life won 4 Gold awards and 1 Silver, followed by Report on Business (3 Gold, 4 Silver), L’actualité (3 Gold, 2 Silver), explore (3 Gold, 1 Silver), Sportsnet (2 Gold) and The New Quarterly / Arc Poetry Magazine (2 Gold).
Top Award-Winning Magazines at the 35th National Magazine Awards:
| Magazine | Gold | Silver | HM |
| The Walrus | 6 | 6 | 20 |
| The Grid | 4 | 2 | 11 |
| Toronto Life | 4 | 1 | 19 |
| Report on Business | 3 | 4 | 23 |
| L’actualité | 3 | 2 | 17 |
| explore | 3 | 1 | 15 |
| Sportsnet | 2 | 0 | 2 |
| The New Quarterly / Arc Poetry Magazine |
2 | 0 | 1 |
| Maclean’s | 1 | 2 | 15 |
| Flare | 1 | 2 | 0 |
| Eighteen Bridges | 1 | 1 | 8 |
| Cottage Life | 1 | 1 | 7 |
| Maisonneuve | 1 | 1 | 7 |
| Canadian House & Home | 1 | 1 | 6 |
| Elle Canada | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| More | 1 | 1 | 3 |
| Event | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Canadian Art | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Fashion Magazine | 0 | 2 | 1 |
Also winning a Gold award were Chatelaine, Châtelaine, DesignLines Toronto, Québec Science, Ryerson Review of Journalism, Sharp, This Magazine, Today’s Parent and Urbania.
Winning one Silver award were Canadian Business, Canadian Family, Canadian Geographic, enRoute, Fiddlehead, Nuvo, Ottawa Magazine, The New Quarterly and Up Here.
NOTABLE WINNERS
The most decorated individual article of the evening was “Where Asbestos is Just a Fact of Life” by John Gray and Stephanie Nolen (Report on Business), which was nominated for a record 5 awards and won Gold in Business, Silver in Politics & Public Interest, and Honourable Mention in Health & Medicine, Investigative Reporting, and Science, Technology & the Environment.
Dominique Forget of L’actualité led all writers with 5 nominations for 5 different articles, and won Gold in Service: Personal Finance & Business (“Impôts: la colère monte”).
Paul Wilson was perhaps the most unique writer celebrated, as he won both Gold and Silver in the category One-of-a-Kind for “Adrift on the Nile” (The Walrus) and “The Archivist” (The Walrus).
The new magazine Eighteen Bridges won its first National Magazine Award when Don Gillmor was named the Gold winner in Arts & Entertainment (“All In”). The article, also nominated in Personal Journalism, examines the great career of the late Paul Quarrington, a 5-time NMA winner. This is Gillmor’s 10th National Magazine Award. Eighteen Bridges had 10 nominations this year.
VISUAL CATEGORIES
In the Fashion category, Flare won Gold for the third year in a row, and in fact swept Gold and Silver. Photographer Chris Nicholls, art director Tanya Watt and stylist Fiona Green took Gold for “Your Majesty.” The same photographer/art director duo joined stylist Elizabeth Cabral in winning Silver with “Nature of Prints.”
The Homes & Gardens category saw a sweep by Canadian House & Home, with “Among the Treetops” winning Gold (Mandy Milks, Michael Graydon, Suzanne Dimma) and “Mindfully Minimal” taking Silver.
WRITTEN CATEGORIES
In Editorial Package, Toronto Life (“The Digital Issue”) and The Grid (“A Chef’s Guide to Toronto”) tied for the Gold award.
“What You Don’t Know About Stephen Harper” by Paul Wells and John Geddes (Maclean’s) took the Gold award for Politics & Public Interest.
In the Humour category, Scott Feschuk won his second National Magazine Gold Award for “A Reading from the Book of Tebow” (Sportsnet). In fact, Feschuk defeated himself in this category, as he was also nominated for two other articles this year in Humour.
Alison Motluk won Gold for Investigative Reporting (“A Political Meltdown”; The Walrus). Motluk won Silver in this category last year.
The Walrus swept the Society category, with Katherine Ashenburg’s “The Long Goodbye” winning the Gold. Also from The Walrus, “Madam Premier” by Lisa Gregoire won Gold in Profiles.
Catherine Dubé won her 7th National Magazine Award when she took Gold in the category Service: Health & Family (“Demain, des centres à 7$ par jour pour les vieux?”; L’actualité).
Charles Wilkins won his 3rd Gold National Magazine Award, this year taking the top prize in the Travel category for “The Big Blue” in explore.
The article “Quand je serai plus là, qui va s’occuper de mes poissons?” by Pascale Millot from Québec Science was the Gold winner in Health & Medicine.
The Gold award in Personal Journalism went to Anne Marie Lecomte for “Parti sans bruit” (Châtelaine).
In the category Best Short Feature—under 2000 words—there was a tie for Gold between Heather O’Neill (“When Your Mother is a Stranger”; Chatelaine) and JJ Lee (“On the First Time He Told a Girl She Was Beautiful”; ELLE Canada).
In 2011 the literary magazines The New Quarterly and Arc Poetry Magazine published a joint issue, and from the pages of this issue Alice Major won Gold in the Essays category (“The Ultraviolet Catastrophe”) and Matthew Holmes won Gold in Poetry (“The Failing of Purity”).
Event magazine – the thrice-yearly literary review from Douglas College – swept the awards in the Fiction category for the second consecutive year, with Bill Gaston (“Four Corners”) winning Gold and Wayde Compton (“The Instrument”) taking the Silver.
DIGITAL ACHIEVEMENT
For the second consecutive year, The Walrus magazine won the Gold award for Best Digital Design for its companion site WalrusMagazine.com. FashionMagazine.com took the Silver.
The popular TorontoLife.com production “TIFF.to,” which covers the annual Toronto International Film Festival, won the Gold for Best Multimedia Feature. FashionMagazine.com’s “At the Shows / Spring 2012” won Silver.
BEST NEW CREATIVE TALENT
OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENT
MAGAZINE OF THE YEAR—PRINT
Winner: Maisonneuve
A broad-minded, insatiable magazine that publishes investigative journalism, long-form essays and breathtaking artwork, Maisonneuve strives to support emerging talent and present the arts and ideas of Quebec to Anglophone Canada. 2011 saw the magazine publish several high-profile investigative pieces and photo essays, and it was rewarded with nine National Magazine Award nominations. Maisonneuve recently celebrated its 10th anniversary, and over the past decade it has won 18 National Magazine Awards, including now two wins (2004 and 2011) for Magazine of the Year.
The other two finalists for Magazine of the Year—Print were Outdoor Canada and Sportsnet.
Visit www.magazine-awards.com to read more about this year’s winners. [List of Winners PDF]
35th anniversary National Magazine Awards are sponsored by: