USA TODAY US Edition

Disney+ joins the space race with ‘The Right Stuff’

Latest version of the story has different angles and details than the feature film.

- Bill Keveney

Disney+‘s “The Right Stuff ” is launching into space, just like the namesake book and film that chronicled NASA’s Project Mercury, but the familiar trip has a longer timetable and a somewhat different itinerary.

That largely comes through the luxury of an eight-episode first season (streaming weekly starting Oct. 9) that delves more deeply into the lives of the military test pilots who became the first NASA astronauts and concludes with the project’s inaugural flight by Alan Shepard. The remainder of the one-man Mercury flights covered in Tom Wolfe’s 1979 bestseller and the U.S. space program will be depicted in hoped-for future seasons.

As the latest series in a TV space race that includes “For All Mankind” (Apple TV+) and “Away“(Netflix), “The Right Stuff ” explores the relationsh­ip of the Mercury 7 crew, with a special focus on the rivalry between Shepard (Jake McDorman) and John Glenn (Patrick J. Adams), on board the third Mercury flight.

“Getting into the weeds with who these guys were is something that eight episodes gets to explore in a way that the book could, but any movie just runs out of real estate,” McDorman says.

“This doesn’t just stop with the seven men. It (highlights) their wives and the people who were instrument­al in starting NASA, like Bob Gilruth and Chris Kraft, defining what an astronaut was going to be,” says McDorman (“Murphy Brown”), who listened to Dennis Quaid, a star of Philip Kaufman’s 1983 film, narrate an audio version of Wolfe’s book as he drove to the set in Florida.

The series won’t track Chuck Yeager, portrayed in the book and and film as the greatest test pilot of all, but includes the Mercury 13, a group of female pilots who went through the same physiologi­cal tests as the eventual astronauts but weren’t featured in the earlier projects.

Excluding Yeager “was a hard choice to make,” says executive producer Mark Lafferty, who adds that the series is based on “a little bit of the movie, much more of Tom Wolfe’s book and a great deal of outside research.

It’s important to tell the story of the women of the Mercury 13, as personifie­d by real-life pilot Jerrie Cobb (Mamie Gummer), especially at a time when the culture is paying more attention to people who have not received their due historical­ly, Lafferty says.

“If the show goes on to future seasons and covers ground outside the bounds of Wolfe’s book, the hope is that we will get to the first female astronaut, the first Black astronaut, the first nonwhite-male-test-pilot astronaut” as it explores the Gemini, Apollo and spaceshutt­le programs, he says.

“The Right Stuff,” the first National Geographic series produced specifical­ly for Disney+, details the bravery of the astronauts, but also chronicles excessive drinking and philanderi­ng that were largely concealed by the idolizing portraits in Life magazine, a media force whose ability to shape history is detailed.

The behavioral transgress­ions don’t lessen the astronauts’ status or accomplish­ments, says Adams (”Suits”).

“Anyone who puts their life on the line to accomplish something great, especially in a time that was as fractured and dangerous as that time in American history, (is) heroic. But no hero is perfect,” he says. “We wanted to show how imperfect human beings responded when they were under pressure and trying to accomplish something that seemed impossible.”

Shepard and Glenn, whose conflicted relationsh­ip gets more detailed scrutiny, reflect that dynamic, as Shepard’s liaison with a prostitute almost grounded the space program before it took off, and Glenn’s calculated self-promotion alienated fellow astronauts.

“These could not have been two more different guys. They both were absolutely in love with flying, going faster, further and higher than anyone else, but beyond that, their personalit­ies couldn’t have been more different, more in conflict,” Adams says. “They were always considered to be the head of the pack. John was very comfortabl­e in front of the camera and Alan wasn’t, but little did (Glenn) know there were going to be other circumstan­ces that would lead to the final choice” of who flew first.

“The Right Stuff ” joins a spate of space sagas as millions cheer private company SpaceX‘s success, both signs of public interest in space exploratio­n, McDorman says. But there’s also skepticism about the nation’s ability to unite in a common pursuit.

“The story of the American space program is a great example of people accomplish­ing things that otherwise would seem impossible,” McDorman says. “The things we can accomplish are limitless, but you have to come together to do those things. Right now, unfortunat­ely, I think we’re pretty divided.”

“Getting into the weeds with who these guys were is something that eight episodes gets to explore in a way that the book could, but any movie just runs out of real estate.”

Jake McDorman

 ?? NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC ?? John Glenn (Patrick J. Adams), seated between Virgil “Gus” Grissom (Michael Trotter) and Leroy Gordon “Gordo” Cooper (Colin O’Donoghue), speaks at a NASA press conference in Disney+’s “The Right Stuff.”
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC John Glenn (Patrick J. Adams), seated between Virgil “Gus” Grissom (Michael Trotter) and Leroy Gordon “Gordo” Cooper (Colin O’Donoghue), speaks at a NASA press conference in Disney+’s “The Right Stuff.”

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