A very special birthday

ITALY

A very special birthday


A very special birthday
In this photo: Rita Levi Montalcini - Photo by A.Oliviero



Life Senator, Nobel Laureate and Cavaliere di Gran Croce OMRI Rita Levi Montalcini is 101 years old today and we are sure you would like to join Italy Magazine in wishing her “tanti auguri”. She is the oldest living Nobel laureate.

Born in Turin to a Sephardic Jewish family, Rita Levi Montalcini decided early on that she wanted to go to medical school. She overcame her father's opposition, which was based on a traditional view of a woman's role, and graduated from the Turin Medical School in 1936 - just in time to be barred from her professional work by the Mussolini government.

Undaunted, she set up a laboratory in her home and in 1943 she fled, with her family, to Florence, where she set up a second laboratory. She returned to Turin in 1945 and was invited to work at the Washington University in St Louis, where she was made a full Professor in 1958. She returned to work in Rome in 1961. Rita Levi Montalcini and her colleague Stanley Cohen received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1986 for their work on nerve growth factor. Although now blind, she continues to be academically active and to publish her works.
In the following video by Noberlprize.org, an interview (in English) to Rita Levi Montalicini:

In 2009 she told the Times that she had never married because she had not wanted to be "dominated" in the way that her mother was [although she adored her father] and that she puts her longevity down to getting up at 5 am, working hard to keep her brain active and eating only one meal a day, at lunchtime.

Today the internet is celebrating Rita Levi Montalcini’s big day with rita101 and President Napolitano has sent the following message:
“On the occasion of the birthday of Life Senator Rita Levi Montalcini I should like to offer, in the name of all Italians, my warmest good wishes to an inspiring woman and distinguished person, in recognition of her always deep, meticulous and exemplary commitment to science, its institutions and to her country.”

Rita Levi Montalcini is recovering from a fall in which she broke her femur in February.

Here's an interview (in Italian) to Tullio Regge and Rita Levi di Montalcini in occasion of her 100th birthday:

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