Anything I learned about the fine art of acting I learned from Hugo.
There is a probably natural and learned reticence with myself talking about my early life.
Architecture is the learned game, correct and magnificent, of forms assembled in the light.
I'll tell you something: my dad was a nuclear engineer and he was really bright, and I've always said that because of negotiating at such a young age with my dad, it was really such a gift because I could then negotiate with very difficult personalities - and not end up being the scapegoat. I learned to really pick and choose my battles.
Tutors who make youth learned do not always make them virtuous.
I spent 11 years at 'The Daily Show,' and I learned everything there about how to write funny, how to write funny on topic.
The whole world opened to me when I learned to read.
I took all my TV experience and what I learned about - by writing and directing and bringing a movie to Sundance - about the realities of the independent film market: 'Transparent' is the marriage of those two situations.
I am going to take something I learned over in Israel. Their Independence Day is preceded the 24 hours before with Memorial Day, so it gives them a chance to serve and reflect and then celebrate. I am going to try to start that tradition here in America.
I really enjoyed every minute of it. I mean, I've learned so much in the last week, I mean, just the way to play a real, real doubles. It was a great experience for me, and we had a lot of fun.
With everybody that I've met, there's always been something I've learned about them that I like.
I've learned that something constructive comes from every defeat.
I mean, I inherited the disease of alcoholism, and I learned early to get help when I needed it.
Woe to the man whose heart has not learned while young to hope, to love - and to put its trust in life.
I learned to take the first job that you have in the business that you want to get into. It doesn't matter what that job is, you get your foot in the door.
I never learned to study in studio school, so I had to teach myself to study.
In the history of medicine, it is not always the great scientist or the learned doctor who goes forward to discover new fields, new avenues, new ideas.
They were afraid, never having learned what I taught myself: Defeat the fear of death and welcome the death of fear.
I never studied theatre; I learned it by doing it. If I had studied theatre, I would not be making the kind of theatre I am making.
I learned the business in about two months, and then made as much as the others, and was consequently doing quite well when the factory burned down, destroying all our machines - 150 of them. This was very hard on the girls who had paid for their machines.
No one has ever learned fully to know themselves.
For the first ten years after I got out of graduate school, I studied success. I read every book I could get my hands on and took every training I could find, and that allowed me to become an expert in this area. I learned how to create high self-esteem and success in my own life and in the lives of others.
I got back into the position of taking care of my husband, which is what I'd learned that I couldn't really do: you can love and make things okay to a certain extent, but you can't fix. I didn't quite learn that until the kayaking incident. It became so clear then.
I learned in a very public setting what works and doesn't work for a healthy lifestyle.
I learned how fast you can go from being an international hero to being a reference in a joke on a late night talk show.
I was lucky to have such a loving, crazy family. I learned to give and share.
I learned one thing from jumping motorcycles that was of great value on the golf course, the putting green especially: Whatever you do, don't come up short.
There are so many guys that come up and have strong hearts, but they just have to understand what the consequences are and how to execute the things that they learned to make themselves successful.
I mean, I inherited the disease of alcoholism, and I learned early to get help when I needed it. I always went to people who knew more than I did.
Working with Danny Thomas was truly an adventure every week. Danny didn't always say the words as they appeared in the script. I learned more by osmosis than by sitting down together. He was a force to be reckoned with: an explorer of television.
What I learned in jail is that I can't change. I can't live a different lifestyle - this is it. This is the life that they gave and this is the life that I made.
I learned to absolutely love the feeling of winning a tough match on a tough point or figuring out how to come back when I was down and win ugly. Walking off the court with a W just made me so happy.
There's something to be learned by listening and absorbing and watching before you start telling the people who have been there how to rearrange chairs.
We owned what we learned back there; the experience and the growth are grafted into our lives.
The first two lessons, which we learned early in our efforts to be good member missionaries, have made sharing the Gospel much easier: We simply can't predict who will or won't be interested in the Gospel, and building a friendship is not a prerequisite to inviting people to learn about the Gospel.
I've learned from every single fight, every single opponent - some great fighters.