Nicolo Paganini. Musical magician and Marfan mutant?
M. R. Schoenfeld
The thesis is advanced that Nicolo Paganini of Genoa (1782 to 1840), the
greatest violin virtuoso of all time, owed his incomparable violin
virtuosity to a fortuitous and fortunate coincidence of three factors: a
soaring musical genius, a flair for the dramatic and ostentatious, and
manual dexterity conferred by being born with the long fingers and
hyperextensible joints of Marfan's syndrome. Ordinarily, an inborn
connective tissue disorder is a calamity for the patient and a burden for
society. In this particular instance, however, Marfan's syndrome bequeathed
to posterity a legacy that will ennoble the human spirit for innumerable
generations yet to come.