Talks at Six series in Chichester set to close after eight years of success

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The latest Talks at Six series in Chichester will be the last, organiser Marilyn Humphrey has confirmed.

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00:00Good morning, my name is Phil Hewitt, Group Arts Editor at Sussex Newspapers. It's always
00:06really genuinely lovely to speak to Marilyn Humphrey, but sadly, very sad news this time,
00:11Marilyn has created and led Talks at Six in Chichester for the past eight years, but the
00:17current series will be the final series, won't it, after how many talks have you had over those eight
00:23years? We've had 178 talks over eight years. And that's a huge achievement, isn't it? Remind me
00:34of the inspiration, why did you start this thing back in 2016? Well, I remember telling you
00:44then and regretting it, so I don't know whether to say it again, but it was really because I
00:50like going to talks, I like listening to people, I like listening to interesting people, but the
00:55only way to do that really is to invite them round to dinner, but I'm not a very good cook.
01:00So I decided that instead of having dinner parties, I'd start Talks at Six. That's a novel
01:08idea, dinner parties without the food then. Dinner parties without the food. Just the talk.
01:13And it has gone brilliantly, hasn't it? It's gone extremely well for year after year,
01:18and you're saying you didn't know whether it would last one week or a fortnight, and yet
01:22eight years it's lasted, and you've had a terrific range of people. Why has it done so well?
01:28Well, I think it's because it's basically local speakers talking about local subjects
01:37in the local environment. So it's promoted Chichester, it's promoted people in Chichester,
01:43it's raised money for quite a lot of Chichester charities, and, you know, charities that are
01:52near to the speaker's heart, because the speaker gets to choose the charity, and I think that's
01:56terribly important. I mean, most, quite a lot of them, obviously, are national charities as well.
02:01But, you know, it's, and it's also got the personal touch, because it's a kind of venue
02:08and thing you could go to easily on your own, and you wouldn't feel, you know, odd by being
02:13a one person. So it's something that groups can go to, couples can go to, singles can go to.
02:20I know, I get to know the people, there's a welcome on the door,
02:24and I hope that that's made a difference, that it's local and personal.
02:29Absolutely. Well, goodness, I know firsthand it's been a very friendly endeavour, hasn't it?
02:34Yeah, yeah.
02:35But also the charitable side has been really important, because by the time you finish,
02:40by the time you've had the last one, you're hoping that you will have raised more than
02:43ÂŁ40,000 for more than 100 charities, which is amazing, isn't it?
02:50Well, and also considering we started off saying it's actually free, and we would just take
02:57donations. And I mean, it's still free, but hopefully you'll give a donation. And of course,
03:02over the time, we've gone from cash to cash and cards, people have been more generous,
03:09more, you know, we're more organised. So we have increased our revenue into the charities
03:16considerably as the time's gone on.
03:19But alas, it is coming to an end, and you finish it with sadness,
03:24but tell me the reasons why it's finishing now.
03:27Well, I feel I've, I'm sort of not techie enough, and I'm not also good enough at publicity and
03:36promotion. Here I am on video, but I don't think I'm good enough on promoting it. Also,
03:46it's a huge commitment. Freddie, my son, who's been, you know, very helpful and instrumental
03:52very helpful and instrumental all along, and has got other commitments. Julia Sander,
03:57who's been really, really helpful in the recent years, obviously, doesn't want to take it on
04:04herself, but has been brilliant at helping me. And I've had loads of helpers along the way.
04:09But there comes a point when I think it's, it's time to hand it over or stop it. But if I hand
04:16it over, I do want it to be run on the similar charity base that this has been. It's not for
04:27profit, it's for charity. And it's not a thing that anybody else can't do and set up on their
04:33own. I mean, you know, they don't have to use, it doesn't have to be talks at six, they can do it
04:38under any name. But no, I just think it's, I've come past my sell by date.
04:44Oh, you're being too harsh. But I think the point is, as you conclude, you can feel enormous pride
04:50at what you've achieved. We spoke right at the very start when you were setting it up.
04:54And here we are, eight years later, you have really, really achieved, haven't you?
05:03Danny, I'm on the phone. Can you just, I'll phone you back. Okay, sorry.
05:11Sorry. I was saying over the years, you have really, really truly achieved, haven't you?
05:17Yeah, and I do hope everybody comes to the last six talks, especially, well, all of them. But
05:24the last one is especially done to celebrate. And that's with Dawn Gracie. She's going to talk about
05:34Dickie Bows and Petticoats, which is her charity, raising money for entertaining elderly people
05:42with lots of lovely 40s, 50s and 60s songs. And we'll have a glass of this and we'll go out
05:51singing and dancing on the, I think it's the 28th of, yeah, 28th November.
05:59Congratulations on all you've achieved with this brilliant series. It's been lovely to
06:03talk to you about it over the years. Thank you and good luck.
06:06Thanks very much. Thanks.

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