What do you know about Sally Ride? For American citizens of a certain age, science wonks, space geeks, and feminist ...
When Sally Ride arrived at NASA's Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center in 1978, there were approximately 4,000 technical employees working there. Want to guess how many were men? If you said 3,996, you're ...
Space was one of Sally Ride’s great loves. The National Geographic documentary, directed by Cristina Costantini, Introduces ...
NASA Engineers thought Sally Ride would need 100 tampons for one week in space. Ride, who became the first American woman in ...
A splendid portrait of the first American woman and the youngest American astronaut to travel into space, SALLY, which ...
Directed by Cristina Costantini, the film features archival footage of the late astronaut and interviews with her family and ...
The week kicked off with a keynote speech by scientist Dawn Wright, who in 1991 became the first Black woman to dive to the ...
The film tells the story of Sally Ride’s groundbreaking journey into space and the immense challenges she faced as a woman in ...
“SALLY” is a found-footage goldmine. The National Geographic film seamlessly mixes authentic audio clips of Ride telling her ...
“Sally” director Cristina Costantini (“Science Fair”) gets waylaid too often in a misguided attempt to build a suspenseful emotional hook around Ride’s personal life, which is a ...
Throughout “Sally,” Costantini (“Science Fair”) leans into Ride’s face — the smile, the blue eyes, the moments of pensive regard — by closing in on archival images. Sometimes ...