Age, Biography and Wiki
Who is it? | Actress, Soundtrack |
Net worth
Lucille Sharp, a talented and versatile artist, finds herself in a promising financial position as her net worth is projected to range from $100,000 to $1 million by 2024. Alongside her impressive success in the music industry, Lucille has also made a significant mark as a soundtrack artist. Her contributions to the soundtracks of highly acclaimed projects like Lau Dai Downton and Burton and Taylor have garnered her well-deserved recognition and further established her as a sought-after figure in the world of music and film. With her remarkable talent and wide-ranging achievements, Lucille Sharp continues to shine as both a successful artist and a notable contributor to captivating soundscapes.
Biography/Timeline
Lucille Shapson Hurley was born in Riga, Latvia. She moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin with her family in 1925. Her father, Carl Shapson, worked in a shoe factory when she was a girl. Shapson attended Wauwatosa High School, and the University of Wisconsin, where she earned a degree in nutrition in 1943. She earning a PhD in nutrition from the University of California at Berkeley in 1950. Her doctoral dissertation was titled "The relationship between pantothenic acid deficiency and adrenal cortical function." She did four years of postdoctoral training at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, focusing on biochemistry and embryology.
During World War II Shapson worked for the War Food Administration as a junior nutritionist. In 1955, she became a founding professor in the Department of Nutrition at University of California at Davis, where she remained for the rest of her professional life. In 1986, her role was expanded to include a joint appointment as professor of internal Medicine in the medical school at Davis.
Hurley's research concerned the biochemistry of prenatal nutrition: how dietary deficiencies could cause specific defects in the embryo, and how those deficiencies might best be prevented. For Example, she was author or coauthor on over fifty published articles about how manganese is absorbed and metabolized, and over 170 papers on zinc deficiencies. Her textbook Developmental Nutrition (1980) synthesized many of her research interests. She also translated a text, Embryogenesis, originally published in German.
Lucille Shapson Hurley died following open heart surgery in 1988, age 65, in Sacramento, California, after several years of kidney disease. At the time of her death, Lucille Shapson Hurley was married to Kenneth Thompson, a fellow professor at Davis.