Las Vegas Review-Journal

Former astronaut Jemison over the moon for ‘Mars’

- By Rick Bentley Tribune News Service

LOS ANGELES — The second season of the National Geographic series “Mars,” set to debut Monday, will continue to blend fictional storytelli­ng with fact to present a look at what the efforts to establish a colony on the red planet would look like in the year 2042.

The six episodes will bounce between events on Mars and interviews with some of today’s top names in science and space exploratio­n.

The show’s creators are taking every precaution to make sure the fictionali­zed part of the story is based in fact, including by having former NASA astronaut Mae Jemison — the first African-american woman to travel in space — as one of the scientific advisers. The 62-year-old knows her way around the solar system as the physician, engineer and social scientist served six years as a NASA astronaut. During her time aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour STS-47 Spacelab Japan Mission in September 1992, she performed experiment­s in material science, life sciences and human adaptation to weightless­ness.

Jemison has had a passion for space since she was a little girl growing up in Chicago. She made it a point not to miss any of the televised Mercury, Gemini or Apollo space mission launches. Her passion was compounded when she saw “Star Trek.”

“One of the things that used to irritate me was that all the astronauts were white males,” Jemison says. “I

MARS

kept thinking that aliens were going to think that was the only kind of people we are. But ‘Star Trek’ had this very diverse cast.

“And, it was a show where science was in the center. What is interestin­g about ‘Mars’ is that science is in the center. It’s one of the characters. It’s OK to like it. The first season had a lot of personal elements, but it was about getting to Mars. Now it’s about, how are we going to treat this new world and these new resources?”

The events unfold in the series in 2042 when the Internatio­nal

Mars Science Foundation (IMSF) astronauts have developed a fullfledge­d colony. If that is close to the actual time frame, Jemison’s time in space came a half-century too early.

“I feel like we have been putzing around with this too long and I should have been on Mars when I was an astronaut,” Jemison says. “When I was a little girl growing up, there was every expectatio­n that we were going to continue on and we would be able to do more things. What I look at is that we have not involved the public enough.

“That’s been to our detriment because the public is excited about space. If we had kept the public informed on what was going on, we would be much further along.”

The lack of connection with the public has not been from a lack of trying by Jemison and National Geographic. She’s promoted space exploratio­n as the author of “Find Where the Wind Goes: Moments

from My Life” and a True Books series on space exploratio­n. And in 1994 she founded internatio­nal science camp The Earth We Share for 12- to 16-year-old students from around the world.

As for National Geographic, the company partnered with

Brian Grazer, Ron Howard and Michael Rosenberg of Imagine Entertainm­ent to create the series. This season delves into the boundaries between science and industry on an isolated, unforgivin­g frontier. It also looks at what happens when a deal must be made with the private sector to get enough funding to continue the work.

Howard describes the first season of “Mars” a “great creative adventure” because no format had been establishe­d as to the ratio between scripted and documentar­y footage. This year will use a similar design to make sure all the scientific elements are there, but according to Howard, there’s also a lot of drama.

“This season certainly has physical action and danger and all of that stuff that makes for good viewing. But it’s more and more psychologi­cal, it’s more and more about relationsh­ips, and a different kind of pressure on these

characters,” Howard says.

Helping play out that drama is a “Mars” cast that includes returning actors from season one along with several newcomers including Jihae (“Mortal Engines”), Jeff Hephner (“Code Black”) and Esai Morales (“NYPD Blue”). On-camera experts include Spacex CEO Elon Musk, former NASA Chief Ellen Stofan, theoretica­l physicist and futurist Michio Kaku, Planetary Society Director of Space Policy Casey Dreier, leading oil and energy expert Antonia Juhasz and bestsellin­g author, activist and awardwinni­ng journalist on climate change Naomi Klein.

Jemison has thrown so much support into working on “Mars” because it’s designed to be both entertaini­ng and educationa­l.

“My belief is that very frequently you can’t tell people stuff, but you can show them and engage them,” Jemison says. “The reason a show like ‘Mars’ can be so powerful is that you are watching all of this develop and you feel like you are a part of it. And, you don’t realize you are learning things.

“That’s why something like ‘Mars’ is really important, because they are working real hard on the science.”

 ?? Dusan Martincek ?? National Geographic Roxy Sternberg as Jen Carson, part of the Lukrum crew in “Mars.”
Dusan Martincek National Geographic Roxy Sternberg as Jen Carson, part of the Lukrum crew in “Mars.”

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