MIGHTY UKE: The Glorious Comeback of a Musical Underdog
Directed by: Tony Coleman & Margaret Meagher
Executive Producer: Ron Mann
Official Website: mightyukemovie.com
Reviews and Articles / Upcoming Screenings! / Clips
UPCOMING SCREENING
The Royal (Toronto) - Friday April 9, 8pm
Tickets $15 and available through Paypal at mightyukemovie.com. The premiere at the Royal in January was a sell out and the film returns for a one night stop before continuing on the MIGHTY UKE ROADSHOW. Live performance by James and his partner, cellist extraordinaire Anne Davison. Don't forget to bring your ukes!
Directed by: Tony Coleman & Margaret Meagher
Executive Producer: Ron Mann
Official Website: mightyukemovie.com
Reviews and Articles / Upcoming Screenings! / Clips
UPCOMING SCREENING
The Royal (Toronto) - Friday April 9, 8pm
Tickets $15 and available through Paypal at mightyukemovie.com. The premiere at the Royal in January was a sell out and the film returns for a one night stop before continuing on the MIGHTY UKE ROADSHOW. Live performance by James and his partner, cellist extraordinaire Anne Davison. Don't forget to bring your ukes!

Originally brought to Hawaii by Portuguese immigrants, the tiny instrument first captured the musical imaginations of the Hawaiian royal court in the 1880’s. With the dawn of the radio broadcasting age, ukulele music owned the airwaves. Broadway produced ukulele musicals. Hollywood produced ukulele movie stars. The little instrument was so inexpensive and easy to play that by the early twenties the uke was the most popular instrument in the American home and the first musical voice for millions of children. Over the next thirty years the uke was number one, and then, with the rise of rock and roll guitar, faded into nerdy obscurity, until now.


MIGHTY UKE travels the world to discover why so many people of different nations, cultures, ages and musical tastes are turning to the ukulele to express themselves, connect with the past, and with each other. From the Redwoods of California through the gritty streets of New York, from swinging London through Tokyo’s highrise canyons to Hawaii, ukers tell the story of the people’s instrument: The Mighty Uke.