Space was one of Sally Ride’s great loves. The National Geographic documentary, directed by Cristina Costantini, Introduces ...
What do you know about Sally Ride? For American citizens of a certain age, science wonks, space geeks, and feminist historians, the easiest answer is the most obvious one: she was the first American ...
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 ...
Directed by Cristina Costantini, the film features archival footage of the late astronaut and interviews with her family and colleagues, as well as narration by her partner of 27 years, Tam ...
Bear Ride, Sally's sister, and former NASA astronaut Cady Coleman were in the audience, as was O'Shaughnessy, whose birthday was celebrated by the filmmakers at a party on Monday night (Jan. 27).
Ride says in the new documentary 'Sally'. “I said ... In the film, Kathy Sullivan, a scientist and former astronaut from Ride’s NASA class, also credits Ride with becoming “the first ...
the former ABC News journalist who covered and befriended Ride before her first space flight and recently published the astronaut’s definitive biography, “Sally Ride: America’s First Woman ...
When Sally Ride arrived at NASA’s Lyndon B ... “Sally” does great justice to an extraordinary astronaut and reluctant icon, someone who broke many barriers and deserves to be celebrated ...
Sally Ride wanted to be remembered ... Director Cristina Costantini balances Ride's stated desire with a longer look at the untold part of the late astronaut's life — as told in the film by ...
Ride should have been able to be the remarkable astronaut she was and live “out and proud and all that stuff,” to quote O’Shaughnessy, pervades “Sally.” Much of the film is informed by O ...
Sundance: Cristina Costantini's documentary explores the enormous tensions of Ride's life and work, but struggles to answer most of its most pressing questions.