Guest guest Posted January 21, 2010 Report Share Posted January 21, 2010 Sounds like a goodie - a lot like Lorenzo's Oil - and all of us parents are crazy - HA! 'Extraordinary Measures' covers unusual fight to save children from rare form of muscular dystrophy Wednesday, January 20, 2010 By Barbara Vancheri, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette The dry facts of Crowley's life sound tragic. He was just 7 years old when his policeman-father was killed on duty. By the time he earned his MBA from Harvard Business School, he was 30 and saddled with student loans in the six figures. The New Jersey native and his wife, Aileen, had a healthy son and then two more children, who were diagnosed with a rare and nearly always fatal form of muscular dystrophy called Pompe (pronounced pom-pay) disease. They had never heard of it, but it immediately shaped their lives and a movie opening Friday called " Extraordinary Measures. " Today, when Crowley talks about his two sons and daughter, it's an optimistic mix of medical updates and average dad stuff, such as how his daughter just wants to meet the Jonas brothers. " is 15, is 13, will be 12 in March. They go to Witherspoon Middle School in Princeton, " Crowley said by phone during a publicity stop in Philadelphia. " They're incredibly smart little kids -- Pompe never affects the mind. So the medicine we invented and got to them in time stopped and reversed the enlargement of their hearts, which was the most life-threatening aspect of the disease, and that saved their lives. " For a while, it strengthened ailing and , but that has waned. " So they're still special kids. They're still in wheelchairs, on ventilators, but they thrive and they're happy and they go to a public school and 's a straight-A student. 's in sixth grade, in seventh, in eighth, and they're incredibly happy. " The movie echoes what the family has learned: the importance of spending time together, of cherishing the joy in life and of innovation in medicine. " We took a great step forward with this medicine but it's just that, it's just a step forward, it's not the final answer, " Crowley says. " So we keep working and a lot of people keep working on the next best answer. " The Crowleys' story is told in " Extraordinary Measures, " starring n Fraser and Keri as and Aileen Crowley. on Ford plays a twice-divorced, brilliant but iconoclastic scientist. The Crowleys and close relatives got a sneak peek a few weeks ago. " They laughed and they cried a little bit and they cheered. I don't know if you can ask any more in a movie. Our kids loved it. " Pompe affects only a few thousand children worldwide, usually leaving them with little to no muscle function, enlarged hearts, and severe difficulty breathing. Crowley left his job with Bristol-Myers Squibb to launch a start-up biotech company focused exclusively on developing a treatment. One of the movie's messages is evident in the closing song, " Change the World " by Clapton. " We didn't change the world, we just helped to change one very small part of it that made a huge difference for us and for small numbers of people. ... If every one person who sees that movie does one thing that can change one little part of the world, you can make it a better place. " The seed for the movie was planted by Geeta Anand, who wrote stories about the Crowleys for The Wall Street Journal and, later, a book called " The Cure: How a Father Raised $100 Million -- and Bucked the Medical Establishment -- in a Quest to Save His Children. " Ford read the articles, called two producers who had made the true-life stories " Brockovich " and " World Trade Center, " and set the wheels into motion. Months of discussions, phone calls, meetings and a crash course in Hollywood ensued. " Ultimately, it comes down to trust because you do sign your life rights away, " Crowley said, although because the movie is inspired by Anand's book, dramatic license was taken. The family was relocated, for instance, from Princeton, N.J., to Portland Ore., characters were composited and timelines compressed. A scene about an attempt to steal life-saving medicine is powerful but not exactly true. " That, in a very dramatic way, captures what was a very intense and frustrating time for us where you really are at your wits' end and you're up against the wall. ... That and every other change in the movie from real life, they made sure to stick to the tone, the image, the dynamics and certainly the spirit of everything that happened, and they captured it beautifully. " Today, the family has a Web site, www.crowleyfamily5.com, and a new book, " Chasing Miracles: The Crowley Family Journey of Strength, Hope, and Joy " (you can read an excerpt online about a 2004 Thanksgiving trip to New York). Crowley runs a biotech company exploring new technologies for Pompe and other diseases, such as Parkinson's. And, at age 42, he has a cameo in " Extraordinary Measures " to his credit. " I had three lines, two got cut, one survived, so I got to keep the SAG card. I played a venture capitalist. So for two days I sat in a conference room in Portland, Ore., and yelled at on and n and told them how crazy they were and their business plan was nuts and it'll never work and they told me basically to go to hell. " It was incredibly therapeutic to sit on the other side of the table Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/10020/1029433-60.stm#ixzz0dBbwKY6o Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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