Tough like a Ukulele.

I've become a ukulele hoarder.

I play the ukulele. Is that quirky?

I started writing stories as a child.

The ukulele is the instrument of peace.

I started doing improv my sophomore year.

I started writing once I got the ukulele.

I like to play the guitar and the ukulele.

Laughter brings out the child in all of us.

There's no ego when you're a ukulele player.

The only instrument I play myself is the ukulele.

I do one thing Gielgud didn't: I play the ukulele.

I started playing piano when I was 6, ukulele at 7.

When I was five. That's when I started to love film.

I started out as a lousy actress and have remained one.

The ukulele has always appealed to the older generation.

I started out playing ukulele when I was 5 or 6 years old.

The three of us pitched in $15,000 a piece to get it started.

If you pick up a ukulele, it will make you unbelievably happy.

If everyone played the ukulele, the world would be a better place.

To this day, if I ever meet grownups who play ukulele, I love 'em.

I actually first picked up an ukulele before I picked up a guitar.

I love music, and playing ukulele and singing makes me really happy.

There's not much you can do with a ukulele that doesn't sound happy.

When I was a teenager, my mom got me a really nice baritone ukulele.

I think beating someone to death with a ukulele would just sound funny.

When I was growing up, there was no such thing as a touring ukulele player.

I've recently started composting in my apartment, which is quite an adventure.

While I was in high school, I started working professionally and got an agent.

When we first started, we were a band from Athens and that was so off the map.

Because if everyone played the ukulele, this world would be a much happier place.

My mother gave me a ukulele at age eight, and I sang the popular tunes of the day.

It's hard to be depressed around a ukulele. You just pick it up and you're halfway home.

An invention has to make sense in the world it finishes in, not in the world it started.

Anything you can do needs to be done, so pick up the tool of your choice and get started.

I bring my ukulele everywhere I go, play a little music in the park, always have it with me.

I play piano and ukulele, and I taught myself those things just because I wanted to play them.

When I got back into the film business after college, I started out as a production assistant.

When I got divorced and moved into an apartment, I started keeping the TV on, just for company.

I have an all-black Mahalo ukulele - it's like my baby. It has brought me so much peace and comfort.

I like to play the ukulele, but I'm not, like, awesome at it. I mostly play the piano and the guitar.

I had a ukulele when I was about seven. Then I started playing around with the mandolin and the banjo.

Sometimes when you're writing on a ukulele, you're in a totally new land, rhythmically or melodically.

I realized that I really didn't like the sound of the ukulele so much so I started playing the guitar.

Now, when I started my theater, the modus operandi was having the actors stare right into the audience.

My nerves before a gig got worse; I had terrible bad nerves all the time. Once we started... I was fine.

I think my first instrument was a ukulele that they gave me. I used to know how to play that pretty well.

I always have a guitar or ukulele in the trailer, and I write songs. That keeps me in an artistic mind-set.

I prepared five songs, I sang them, and he hired me. I started working about a month later at the piano bar.

The Bolsheviks started not just on the killing of private property; they were trying to abolish money itself.

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