Posted April 21, 2015 in "Gordon Library"
French television visits Gordon Library, shoots segment on Robert Harvey Collection
Producer Julia Montfort and journalist Guy Lagache of Paris-based production company Let’s Pix speak with Jess Colati (center) at the Gordon Library about WPI’s extensive Robert J. Harvey collection.
“Success” and “failure” are two labels we often hear in various contexts. Both are loaded terms, intensely subjective, and, very often, interdependent.
Serial
entrepreneur and WPI alum Robert Harvey (PhD ’70) experienced
both—and, more important, learned from both.
One
of his deemed “failures,” an artificial sweetener called Miralin
that he attempted to bring to market in the 1970s is to be the
subject of an upcoming French investigative documentary.
Earlier
this month, a film crew from the Paris-based production company Let’s
Pix spent a day at the Gordon Library, culling through WPI’s
extensive Robert J. Harvey collection and shooting segments for the
film.
“They
were so excited when we opened the boxes—’This is what we’ve
been looking for!’” recalls Jess Colati, the library’s
assistant director of curation, preservation, and archives.
The
roughly 45-minute documentary, hosted by French journalist Guy
Lagache, is still in production and is expected to air as part of a
larger 90-minute piece later this year, according to Colati. The core
focus will be on Harvey’s development and marketing of Miralin,
what he deemed a “miracle fruit” natural sweetener, which never
came to market because it was ultimately denied FDA approval.
Harvey,
a Pittsburgh native, West Point graduate, and Korean War veteran,
received his PhD in biomedical engineering from WPI in 1970 (WPI
boasted one of the few biomedical programs in the country at the
time). Beyond his development of Miralin—the subject of his
thesis—he also designed the first nuclear-powered artificial heart,
which he received a patent for in 1968. The latter took up the bulk
of his career; he co-founded the Thoratec Corp. in California, whose
Ventricular Assist Device was implanted in patients awaiting heart
transplants.
After
his retirement in 1996, Harvey returned to WPI to serve as an
entrepreneur-in-residence, teaching a course in business that
dissected his successful and not-so-successful endeavors. “He had a
lot of connections to WPI over a 40-year period,” Colati says.
Harvey’s
collection, which was donated after his death in 2012 by his son,
Brian D. Harvey, and is permanently organized and housed in the
library’s Fellman Dickens Reading Room, is partly digitized and
includes extensive records of his entrepreneurial pursuits, papers,
theses, lab reports, company records, promotional materials,
articles, correspondence, and photographs. According to Colati, it is
one of roughly 70 personal papers collections at the library.
“It’s
a trove of records related to really what we’d call ‘startups’
today,” she says. “Here was a man who was successful and at times
unsuccessful in business. He clearly had some interesting ideas and
innovations.”
Colati
says she first received contact from Let’s Pix’s
researcher-producer Julia Montfort last fall. She was told they were
looking for locations that were “key to the Miralin story.”
They
arranged to arrive on campus on April 6, and spent about 12 hours in
the archives, poring over and filming digitized and as-yet-to-be
digitized materials, including Harvey’s papers, FDA reports, early
promotional paraphernalia, lab reports, and photographs of
greenhouses where the actual “miracle fruit” was being grown.
The
goal was to have host Lagache “discover the records, get those
moments on film,” Colati explains. “It was a dual purpose of
filming and discovering additional information.”
The
intrigue is ultimately in Miralin’s demise. Harvey founded the
Miralin company to test and market the product, and initially it was
supported by the FDA because it was all-natural, says Colati.
However, as it proved to be more and more successful, the process
lagged; the FDA began to require significantly more testing than it
initially indicated would be required, indicating that there might
have been some backdoor lobbying or pressure from other artificial
sweetener and sugar industry interests, she says.
Before
folding the company, Harvey wrote in correspondence about how he was
feeling pressured and being “unduly targeted,” says Colati. “He
was suggesting that there’s something amiss at the FDA.”
After
their visit to WPI, the Let’s Pix crew headed to Washington, D.C.,
to speak with FDA representatives, and planned to make a few other
stops in the states for interviews and research. In the meantime,
until the documentary airs, the collection is open to anyone looking
to find out more about this unique and innovative WPI alum.
“He
had some interesting vision, and he was able to act on it,” says
Colati. “He was clearly a very dedicated person—he clearly wanted
to help people.”
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BY TARYN PLUMB
Original story link.
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