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I knew that mike would be a troublemaker!
2007-11-17 10:05:48
Emsworth U3AI had an early start yesterday: I was on the train by 07.30 to travel to Emsworth in Hampshire to speak to their U3A on My Life as a Freelance Comedy Writer. Despite major delays to most trains when I changed at Southampton, I still managed to arrive early which is always a major relief to anyone who books a speaker - especially one who uses public transport!Public Speaking Tip #68: Most people who regularly organise speakers have been let down at one time or another so they will be delighted to see you turn up. Very few will complain if you arrive early!Public Speaking Tip #69: Arriving early at a booking may sometimes involve sitting through a business meeting/other speakers before it is your turn to address the audience but it is amazing how often listening to others can inspire a relevant addition to your own presentation. If this happens, be prepared to make a quick, brief note and mentally rehearse this additional tailored material.There were 90 in the audience (a ver


Now some visual aids
2007-11-14 14:10:46
More Public Speaking Tips in the Photos section of this blogClick on each of the Photos on this site and you will find a short article which includes, like all my blog posts, a useful Public Speaking Tip.


To be a good visiting speaker you need to visit good speakers!
2007-11-14 07:13:55
Boscombe and Southbourne ProbusMy third booking last week was a talk for Boscombe and Southbourne Probus on Thursday. I have a great fondness for this club because my first talk there ten years ago led to a couple of amusing incidents which have been extremely popular in talks ever since, as well as being published in 'Nick R's in a Twist!' In fact, it was also at that engagement that someone first suggested that I should publish a collection of my stories.This was my fourth visit and I was pleased to see that a successful recruiting campaign was paying off for them so there were 45 present for my talk about Groucho Marx. It went very well and there was a good question and answer session afterwards - always a bonus!Among the members was Mr Tom Hall, Honorary Secretary of the Southbourne Literary Society where I will be delivering another brand new talk, 'I Must Write That Down: A Commonplace Book', on 21 November. It's always a double bill there, a literary speaker usually follow
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Question 1: If I'm not happy with my presentation, can I take it back?
2007-11-09 11:17:15
Last Tuesday, I delivered two talks: a brand new quiz for Bournemouth Central Probus followed by Life as a Freelance Comedy Writer for a large group of retired Marks and Spencer staff.Bournemouth Central Probus ClubOn Tuesday 6 November, I was the speaker at the Bournemouth Central Probus Club. This was my fourth visit, but the first time I had ever been booked for one of their Coffee Mornings. It was also the 'première' of my new Great Comedy Quiz.I was sorry to learn that the Speaker Secretary who had booked me, Frank Marsh, had passed away. You meet some memorable characters at speaking engagements and he was someone I had enjoyed speaking to at previous bookings.There were about 45 people at the Belvedere Hotel (including members' wives) and I think they were used to talks rather than quizzes at this type of meeting but fortunately this new title combines both as I deliver anecdotes about the comics or shows revealed to be the correct answers (it makes it seem less like an exam
Read more: Question , presentation

All I can say is I just wish I'd brought forget-me-nots
2007-11-08 02:02:07
Bourne Valley Horticultural Society, Winterbourne EarlsLast Thursday (November 1st), I set off to speak on 'The Comedy of Life' at the Bourne Valley Horticultural Society, Winterbourne Earls, near Salisbury. I caught a Virgin train from Bournemouth and changed at Southampton. Before, I write about the talk itself, I must give a special mention to the Train Manager (I think we used to call these people guards or conductors!), a man whose announcements managed to turn this straightforward 30-minute journey into a grim experience.He told us as we set off that the shop on board would soon be open. Unfortunately, that was the last positive thing he said. He asked that all luggage be removed from seats. Now, I can fully appreciate from personal experience how annoying it is when you're trying to find a spare seat on a crowded train and the few available are covered with bags by someone who's obviously keen not to share their own little (double) space. It probably isn't too hygienic eith


And now the small talk
2007-10-27 11:20:31
Why I Speak to Smaller OrganisationsRegular readers of this blog will notice that many of my speaking engagements are for smaller clubs and societies (although I'm not sure that the audience of 200 at Romsey U3A last month falls into that category!) but, over the years, I have certainly had a decent number of corporate bookings, whether from speaker bureaus and entertainment agencies or booked directly by the organisations themselves. Some have involved provided training for others, such as the Home Office, ICL Fujitsu, Christchurch Borough Council and many more, while others have been purely for entertainment, for example, at the Glass NTO, the Marsh Business Breakfast Club and various others.Some people think that public speaking is only about big-money motivational workshops or after dinner speaking but these are just one, highly competitive element of the business of giving presentations. The huge fees generally only go to celebrities - and the number of them competing for the lim


If you would now like to look at your papers
2007-10-23 17:14:37
There have been a couple of interesting news stories relating to public speaking in the past couple of days. Gerald Ratner AutobiographyThe Sunday Times printed an extract from The Rise and Fall...And Rise Again, the autobiography of Gerald Ratner, which is published next week by John Wiley. Ratner is easily one of the best (or worst!) examples of the damage that can be done by including inappropriate material in a speech. In April 1991, he addressed the annual conference of the Institute of Directors and (having been advised to include humour) told his audience that his company was able to sell a sherry decanter for less than a tenner because it was 'total crap' (a line which, remarkably, he had also used a week earlier at another function in the presence of Princess Anne) and that a pair of their earrings were cheaper than a prawn sandwich from Marks and Spencer.He got laughs and a standing ovation but the longer term outcome of his speech was a billion-pound turnover slashed overn
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Next, we come to the category for Best Small Audience of 2007
2007-10-16 04:42:25
Kington Magna WIAfter updating this blog last Thursday, I set off for a talk in North Dorset. The Wilts and Dorset X3 service was being driven so slowly up the Spur Road from Bournemouth that I began to wonder whether I'd reach my destination by the following day, let alone that one, but at Ringwood our driver seemed to transmogrify into a Lewis Hamilton wannabe who took sharp bends on country lanes at what felt like quite alarming speeds for a double decker. Nothing seemed to be happening quickly in Salisbury, where I walked out of the bank without transacting any business after wasting several minutes in a seemingly stationary queue and then had to wait ages to buy a ticket at the station where only one of the three ticket windows was open and that was busy with a passenger's long and complicated enquiry. But none of these factors were allowed to affect my forthcoming talk.Public Speaking Tip #43: A professional should not let personal frustrations or difficulties affect the qualit
Read more: Small , Audience

Now, I'm all in favour of free speech (advice)
2007-10-11 03:30:14
Free booklet 'How to Make Effective Presentations' with today's IndependentThis year has seen some excellent newspaper give-aways which have been very useful for anyone interested in public speaking. In April/May, the Guardian gave away 14 booklets and a CD of Great Speeches of the Twentieth Century. These were very nicely produced and contained overviews from historians as well as the content of speeches from JFK, Churchill, Mandela, MacMillan, FDR, Khrushchev, Emmeline Pankhurst, Martin Luther King, de Gaulle, Thatcher, Nehru, Aneurin Bevan, Virginia Woolf and Earl Spencer. With a line-up like that, I can even forgive them for never sending the free storage box that I saved up all those tokens for!Throughout July, the Daily Mail gave away DVDs of the superb documentary series The World at War. Not only did this give me the opportunity to see a brilliant work that I never appreciated as a child in the 1970s but it also contains footage of historic speeches and relaxed, fluent inter


So let's come right up to date...
2007-10-11 02:06:26
A Speechwriting Challenge Helped by Mind MapsOctober may look as if it's going to be a bit quieter as far as speaking engagements are concerned but on the very first day I found myself busy with other work. I got a call from a client who  was having a  party thrown for him and he wanted a speech written in case he was asked to say a few words. There were just a few problems:1. This was a 'surprise' party which he was not supposed to know about so he could hardly produce a script! He would therefore have to learn the speech by heart.2. Because he was meant to appear 'surprised', the speech could not sound too structured/scripted but had to be in conversational language, as if it was something he had been thinking up in the past few minutes.3. The party was the following evening so I would have to get started straight away with little chance to collect personal information to ponder and write around - just a few biographical facts.We agreed a price and a deadline. Then he


To paraphrase the proverb: you can't please everyone - just the vast majority!
2007-10-10 03:24:36
Barton on Sea ProbusMy last speaking engagement of September was for Barton on Sea Probus on the 26th. This was my third visit to this club and, as on previous occasions, it was a mixed meeting with members' partners present: 67 people in all.The room at Shorefield is a bit of a barn and I was asked to use a microphone. Neither of the club's own mics (a wireless hand-held and a clip-on) were suitable - both were tinny and there were also feedback problems. The venue then offered two of their own: one that clips on the ear so the speaker looks like Michael Jackson or Madonna, and another hand-held. I felt self-conscious with the clip-on so I opted for the latter!The Patrick Campbell talk seemed to go pretty well and I also added a new 'prop'; Val had bought me some copies of Lilliput magazine from the 40s and 50s, a publication Campbell wrote for, and knowing that they were of age to remember this, I invited audience members up afterwards to look at one. This was a great hit!Public
Read more: everyone

A Motioning Table
2007-10-07 17:58:57
Brain MenAfter my talk in Romsey, I caught the train for Southampton. I don't think I ever go there without visiting both branches of the remaindered bookshop chain The Works which are situated within a few hundred yards of each other in the city centre. I have often picked up books and recordings which are of use for my public speaking research and on this occasion I bought a copy of Marcus Berkmann's Brain Men for just £1.99. This is a humorous look at quizzes, from the pub variety to big-money TV game shows.As a speaker, I have hosted three quizzes for Blah di Blah, Dorset's Festival of Words and Literature (these were linked to the BBC's RaW project) and co-hosted two others for the Bournemouth Literary Festival. I am currently putting together a new quiz where I will be the one devising the questions so I hope to pick up a few tips from this book as well as being entertained by Berkmann's writing (and not for the first time; in the late 80s he co-wrote Lenin of the Rovers, o
Read more: Table

Moving swiftly on...
2007-10-06 10:49:04
Romsey U3AI was up early the next morning as I had to be in Romsey for a 10am talk about 'The Wits of the Algonquin Round Table' for the town's U3A, a group I had last spoke to nearly five years earlier. It has grown considerably since then, in fact this was the largest audience I'd had for a while: 200!Public Speaking Tip #28: To a beginner, even an audience of 20 can seem daunting but once you get in the habit of regular public speaking, you will find that numbers don't seem to make a lot of difference to you, in fact, if you are anything like me, you will soon come to regard audiences of less than 60 as small!This even carries over to speaking on radio where there may be tens (or even hundreds) of thousands of listeners - it can feel no different to speaking to a group of 40 in a hall. This is what regular practice can do for you.I handed the Speaker Secretary who would be introducing me a card with a few brief details.Public Speaking Tip #29: If you are asked to provide inform
Read more: Moving

It's the way I sell 'em!
2007-10-01 22:41:54
Milford-on-Sea WIOn the evening of the 18th I spoke about 'My Life as a Freelance Comedy Writer' to Milford-on-Sea WI. This is one of the biggest Women's Institutes in the New Forest and there were about 65 at the meeting. It's funny how often before a talk like this I will get someone asking if I find it daunting to speak to a large group of ladies. Not at all, in fact I once spoke to 500 at the Spring Council Meeting of the Avon Federation of Women's Institutes and really enjoyed the experience. In future posts, I might mention some of the audiences who were daunting...!The Milford ladies were a great crowd and afterwards a number of them took the updated free 'Twelve Tips for Terrified Speakers!' leaflet. Sales of my booklet 'Nick R's in a Twist!' were excellent - 22 copies!Which brings me on to merchandising. The first item I offered widely at talks was the BBC double cassette 'Roy Hudd's Pick of the Huddlines'. I eventually sold all the copies I had ordered from BBC W


The Eyes have it
2007-10-01 09:37:00
Speechwriting ad in Private EyeOn 18 September I also decided to run another classified ad for my speechwriting in Private Eye. The Eye is the place to advertise such services nowadays but I also wanted somewhere with a very large readership to mention this new public speaking tips blog.While Private Eye pretty much has the monopoly as far as print advertising for us speechwriters is concerned, there are other national publications which can be extremely useful to speakers in other ways. Obviously the big major political speeches are reproduced in the papers (sometimes in their entirety in the broadsheets) but all national newspapers print stories with snippets from other high-profile speakers. Sometimes a broadsheet Diary column will reproduce a good one-liner from a successful topical after dinner speech by someone like Rory Bremner and you can use this to see what type of material works with certain audiences. You will also get the occasional tabloid story about some celebrity who h


Ladies and gentlemen, I give you...
2007-09-30 18:18:32
Something to take away from these talksTuesday 18 September was pretty busy. In the morning I made some changes to the 'Twelve Tips for Terrified Speakers!' leaflet that I give out free at all my speaking engagements by adding that additional tips can now be found at this website/blog and also updating the details of my speechwriting and presentation skills training services and the ever-growing list of my talks.This leaflet started out as 'Ten Tips...!' in 2002 but I expanded it when I was booked to give a presentation for the Central Management Unit of the Home Office three years later. I have given out  thousands of copies, not just at talks which are specifically about public speaking skills but everywhere I am booked, whatever my subject. Of course, it does contain the aforementioned advertising and contact details as well but the important thing is that it gives people useful free advice - any resulting bookings to write speeches, coach speakers or give further talks are


There's an old song which says 'Please don't ever change' - but sometimes it's unavoidable!
2007-09-27 21:34:03
National Grid UK R.E.A. Southampton BranchOn 17 September, I began a run of four talks on different topics in a three-day period (I had a similar schedule back in January; it's the way the bookings fall sometimes). The first engagement was a return visit to the National Grid UK R.E.A. Southampton Branch (although when I first spoke to them in February 2005 they were simply called Lattice). They had originally booked me for 27 September but rang a few weeks ago to say that their venue, the Southampton Novotel, would not now be able to accommodate them on that day and would I be available on any of three alternative dates?This does happen from time to time; in the past few years I have had bookings cancelled due to: a member's funeral being scheduled for the same date as the club meeting, a WI inadvertently double-booking speakers and a ladies' group  learning that a speaker from Sainsbury's was unexpectedly available, a speaker who would not want a fee and would even bring free
Read more: Please

Now we come to a WI, a PROBUS, a TG, someone AWOL and the occasional BF...
2007-09-25 15:12:41
Kingscote WI Annual LunchOn 5 September, I delivered my talk 'The Power of Humour in Everyday Life' at the Annual Lunch of Kingscote WI. Although they are part of the West Sussex Federation, the event was held at a terrific venue in East Sussex, Barnsgate Manor near Uckfield. I was given a lift in from East Grinstead and we travelled through Ashdown Forest, an area which reminded me of the New Forest, except with sheep roaming everywhere instead of ponies. We passed a llama park and there were even some in the grounds at the venue.Llamas aside, there were about 65 audience members including a few men (WI trustees or their husbands) and we enjoyed a very good meal served in a dining room with views of miles of unspoilt countryside.It was a very hot day and the room was sweltering so I asked for as many doors as possible to be opened before my speech.Public Speaking Tip #19: Before you speak, consider the comfort of the audience who will be listening to you. Opening doors/windows on a


You've all gone very quiet!
2007-09-24 17:57:37
Quiet monthsThe last five speaking engagements that I have posted about were in July and August. Many organisations that book speakers don't meet during the summer, or if they do, they have other activities, such as trips or an AGM. June, July and August can therefore be barren months unless you plan your speaking calendar carefully. If I get calls from clubs or societies which do meet all through the year and they offer me any month I want, I will often choose a summer date. The audiences may be a little depleted due to members being on holiday or looking after children but at least it guarantees that I have something in the diary. December can also be quiet because so many organisations book a cabaret act or put on their own entertainment instead of a speaker for their Christmas meeting.Public Speaking Tip: Once you are getting regular requests to speak, try to spread your bookings throughout the year so that you keep in practice. The quieter months may also be a good time to s


Which brings me to you, my Lord...
2007-09-23 17:59:58
New Forest Past Rotarians and AssociatesOn 22 August, I delivered a morning talk to the New Forest Past Rotarians and Associates at the East Close Country Hotel, Hinton St Michael, a venue where I have spoken on numerous occasions. As with my previous visit to this particular club in 2005, the audience of just over 20 gave me a very good reception.One of my fellow diners at the top table afterwards was Mr Redman. We were talking about public speaking in general and he mentioned that he is a preacher. Now, a while back, I was asked to deliver my talk entitled 'Public Speaking = the Triumph of Technique Over Terror!' (the title is a tip in itself so let's call it Tip #17!) to the Wednesday Club in the Church Hall at Colbury, another part of the New Forest. I have to admit that one of the questions afterwards rather threw me; a couple of the ladies wanted to know how to make giving a reading in church easier for the speaker - and the congregation! As I have no experience of this part


Is this thing on...?!?
2007-09-22 10:27:23
Speaking in KentI am delighted that I already have three bookings to speak in Kent next year. Any speaker will soon discover that the responsiveness of audiences, especially to humour, can vary from county to county and even within them - just a few miles on the map can make a difference. It's not that these quieter audiences aren't enjoying my material - they often come up afterwards and say how much they enjoyed it and ask for my details so they can recommend me to other organisations - but of the 25 counties in which I have spoken (and I have had some great responses across a very wide area, including Eliza Doolittle's Hertfordshire, Herefordshire and Hampshire!) the dozen or so talks that I have delivered in Kent really stand out in terms of level of attendance, immediate response to my opening lines and loud laughter throughout. Do speak there if you get the opportunity.Public Speaking Tip #16: Audiences can vary in response from region to region (and according to a number of o


How are we doing for time?
2007-09-21 10:41:02
More about timingMy previous post was about timing humorous material, in other words, delivering it for maximum effect, but there is another type of timing that speakers need to master: simply knowing how long your speech, or a particular section of it, will take to say.English speakers deliver approximately 180-200 words per minute in conversation but this will usually reduce to around 100-120 for public speaking (unless you happen to be a cattle auctioneer!) Furthermore, the material you have carefully timed in rehearsal is bound to take longer to deliver on the day so further editing will be required.When I took my public speaking exams (I passed the LAMDA Bronze, Silver and Gold Medals and Associate Diploma in the space of a year) I had to deliver a number of short talks, starting with two prepared, four-minute presentations plus a three-minute 'impromptu' speech (just 15 minutes' preparation allowed) for the Bronze Medal. I timed the prepared talks, editing the material accordi
Read more: doing

But that's enough about July; let me now mention a wonderful June...
2007-09-20 16:53:46
June Whitfield on the South Bank ShowI finally got around to watching a video of the recent South Bank Show about June Whitfield. It's often fun when I see comedy documentaries to count the number of people featured in them who I have had some professional involvement with (an edition of The Comedy Map of Britain earlier in the year had six!). There were four in this one: June herself (I was lucky enough to have her perform my material over 23 series of the News Huddlines), Roy Hudd (of course!), June's daughter Suzy Aitchison who was in a sketch of mine on Radio 2's June Whitfield's Variety and Sarah Thomas from Last of the Summer Wine who once delivered a couple of my lines when she guested on Week Ending.Something that was mentioned again and again on the South Bank Show was June's excellent comic timing. Aspiring speakers who want to include humour in their speeches are sometimes worried about not being able to do it justice; their catchphrase is often 'But I'm not a comedia


And still on the subject of July...
2007-09-14 01:14:26
Farnham N.H.S. Retirement FellowshipThings got off to a difficult (and somewhat slapstick start) when I was in my rehearsal room (ok, the Gents) just before my talk and a jet of soap from the dispenser flew straight into my eye!I mentioned this to the audience and it got a laugh. I also forewarned them about my chest infection. Sure enough, the inevitable coughing fit interrupted me a few minutes later (I must say I felt as if I was in the right place as they were retired NHS staff!) but the glass of water wasn't enough to deal with the problem so I kept a lozenge in my mouth and that seemed to do the trick.Public Speaking Tip #8: If you have a problem, such as a cough, briefly forewarn the audience, preferably in a humorous way. It prepares them for the fact that you may have to stop. They will also appreciate the fact that you have still turned up.Public Speaking Tip #9: If you do have a coughing fit which interrupts your presentation, try slipping a lozenge in the corner of your mo
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To continue on this theme...
2007-08-30 13:47:16
A Difficult DecisionOn 8 July, I did something I hadn't done in eleven years as a speaker: I cancelled a booking through illness. Two days earlier (Friday), I had accepted a short notice booking to give a talk the following Monday. I then came down with a very bad cough. By the Sunday evening, I had to decide whether to cancel. There were a number of factors to consider:1. Although I might feel better by the next day, there was also a strong chance I might be even worse!2. My talk was for the Dorset Respiratory Group and I really did not want to risk passing on my chest infection to people who had breathing problems anyway. I also thought that listening to an 'entertainment' featuring a lot of coughing might seem like a bit of a 'busman's holiday' for them!3. I had two more engagements that week, including a long-standing booking involving some travel on the Tuesday and I wanted to rest so I stood a good chance of getting through that one.I phoned the Speaker Secretary and explai


Opening Remarks
2007-08-14 16:05:00
Honoured guests, ladies and gentlemen, Now that my blog is finally up and running, I have decided to make my first entries a round-up of my public speaking experiences and observations from the past few weeks... Arqiva Commercial Radio Awards 2007 On 2 July I was invited to the Arqiva Commercial Radio Awards  at the Royal Lancaster Hotel, Hyde Park as a guest of the Radio Magazine. Highlights of the day included a fabulous lunch, an acoustic gig by Travis, a long conversation about the BBC and American comedy with Adrian Juste plus a chance to finally meet the magazine's editor Paul Boon and his assistantCollette Hillier after writing for them for such a long time. From a public speaking point of view, I was hugely impressed by the compere, Virgin Radio's breakfast presenter Christian O'Connell, who used some excellent, well-prepared radio industry humour to great effect in front of 700 of his peers. Public Speaking Tip #1: Tailored humou


Here's why commonplacing should be common practice!
2007-11-22 14:52:00
Keeping a Commonplace BookLast night, I delivered my new presentation 'I Must Write That Down: A Commonplace Book' for Southbourne Literary Society. I'll write about that engagement in my next post but I'm going to use this one to talk about commonplace books and their extraordinary value for public speakers.A commonplace book is where you copy anything that makes you think 'I must write that down before I forget it!' It may be something you read or hear or perhaps even some words of your own. Quotations, short verse or prose, observations, anecdotes, jokes, facts...anything that strikes you as inspiring, moving, amusing or fascinating - would your audience think the same if you included any of them in a future presentation?They could be inscriptions from monuments dating back centuries or statements from interviewees in today's tabloid press but whatever they are, write them down because many of them will be useful for your public speaking - sometimes much sooner than you could


The Duke of Welly!
2007-11-30 11:00:11
The Duke of Edinburgh as a speakerThere has been a great deal of media coverage over the past couple of weeks of the 60th wedding anniversary celebrations of the Queen and Prince Philip. In the late 40s, the Duke of Edinburgh suddenly found himself being required to speak at a huge number of high-profile events (within a short time, he was the patron of several hundred societies!) He became so proficient at this that books of his speeches were published; I own a copy of one. (It is only when he speaks off the cuff without preparation that he tends to make verbal gaffes - rather like George W Bush!)In an interview in the early 60s, he described after dinner speaking as 'a kind of erudite music hall'. This is very true - there has to be a performance element, however good the material.I have always told students that it can take much longer to master injecting life into the delivery of speeches than it does to learn techniques for overcoming nerves. Sometimes a novice speaker can be so


Mr Watson made it look elementary!
2007-11-29 18:23:44
Slide Presentation by Eric Watson I stayed on at Southbourne Literary Society for the second half of last week's programme: a presentation with slides on 'The History of the Bournemouth Fire Brigade' by Mr Eric Watson, one of this area's most respected speakers. Now, the mere mention of any kind of slide show can produce negative feelings in many people! Perhaps they have found themselves sitting through a neighbour's proud projection of seemingly endless, boring holiday snaps or some dry lecture interrupted by a series of technical hitches with the visual aids. They may even have been subjected to a spectacular but ultimately bafflng modern power point presentation which added nothing to a training day. All I can say is that Eric Watson's slide shows are extremely well-received, in fact next year will see his 1,000th speaking engagement since 1993! He started his presentation by telling the audience that although they may have seen a well-known book by anothe


A memorable memorial
2007-11-29 05:22:35
EulogiesThe President of Southbourne Literary Society who introduced me and gave the vote of thanks was Mr Bonsor who was at LAMDA with my public speaking tutor Angela Brennan and delivered a superb eulogy at her memorial service. Although this was back in February 2000, I remember it very well and as I have noticed that a number of readers are discovering this blog and website while searching the net for guidance for speaking at funerals, I thought I would mention a few of the elements which made that speech so appropriate.There must have been at least 100 people in the church and Mr Bonsor told us about how Angela was the best student at poetry readings when he studied with her. Anyone who had her as their teacher would have noticed how, even in her 60s, poetry was still important to her, both in the lessons she taught and in performances she still gave locally until her failing health meant she had to give up. By contrast, he then went on to mention some of Angela's early professio


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