World’s Oldest Living Person Celebrates 117Th Birthday

World’s Oldest Living Person Celebrates 117Th Birthday
Emma Morano is pictured behind a cake with candles marking 117 years in the day of her birthday in Verbania, Italy on Nov. 29, 2016. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)
The Associated Press
11/29/2016
Updated:
11/29/2016

VERBANIA, Italy—Italy’s Emma Morano, the world’s oldest living person, marked her 117th birthday Tuesday, blowing out all the candles on her cake.

Beaming at the attention, Morano took in the festivities for her milestone celebration sitting in an armchair in her one-room apartment in the northern town of Verbania, joined by her two elderly nieces, a pair of caregivers and her long-time physician.

She received a greeting from Italy’s president, read by an official, wishing her “serenity and good healthy,” and appeared for a brief live broadcast on state-run television. She happily accepted some gifts, including her favorite cookies, which she ate with some milk.

Emma Morano wears a sheet reading 117, in the day of her birthday in her home in Verbania, Italy on Nov. 29, 2016. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)
Emma Morano wears a sheet reading 117, in the day of her birthday in her home in Verbania, Italy on Nov. 29, 2016. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)

Then she blew out the candles on her cake—not one for every year, but three numerals to show her age, 117—and quipped: “I hope I don’t have to cut it!”

To the assembled well-wishers, Morano said, “I am happy to turn 117,” and drew encouragement from her physician, Dr. Carlo Bava.

“Who would have said it?!” the doctor remarked. “When you were young everyone used to say you were weak and sick.”

“Yes, yes,” she responded.

Emma Morano, 117 years hold, is kissed by her caretakers Malgorzat Ceglinska (R) and Yamilec Vergara, on the day of her birthday in Verbania, Italy, on Nov. 29, 2016. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)
Emma Morano, 117 years hold, is kissed by her caretakers Malgorzat Ceglinska (R) and Yamilec Vergara, on the day of her birthday in Verbania, Italy, on Nov. 29, 2016. (AP Photo/Antonio Calanni)

Another party, including a visit from the mayor and another cake, was planned for the afternoon, after a nap.

Morano, who is believed to be the last surviving person in the world born in the 1800s, became the oldest living person in May.

Italy is known for its centenarians—many of whom live on the Mediterranean island of Sardinia—and gerontologists are studying Morano, along with a handful of Italians over 105, to try to figure out their longevity. Bava has credited Morano’s long life to her genetic makeup, “and nothing else.”