Roman Totenberg was born in
Łódź,
Poland to a Jewish family, the son of Adam (an architect) and Stanisława (Winawer) Totenberg. He spent his early childhood years (1914–1921) in
Moscow, where the family moved at the beginning of World War I. Totenberg was a child prodigy Returning to
Warsaw in 1921, he studied with Mieczyslaw Michalowicz, and made his debut at the age of eleven as soloist with the
Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra. He was also awarded the gold medal at the Warsaw Chopin Conservatory. By 1929, he had moved to
Berlin, where he continued his studies with
Carl Flesch. In 1932, he moved to
Paris, where he studied with
George Enescu and
Pierre Monteux. In 1935, he made his British debut in London and his American debut in Washington, D.C. In 1936, at age 25, he played at the
White House Many of his family members were murdered in the
Holocaust, though he managed to rescue his mother. His sister survived the
Warsaw Ghetto, where her own husband had died. ==Professional life==