Sally Ride accomplished multiple firsts when she entered orbit in 1983 at the age of 32, breaking barriers for female astronauts and women in science.Â
Following her death in 2012 at age 61, a new documentary Sally, which premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival, explores the lesser-known truths about Rideâs 27-year romance with life partner Tam OâShaughnessy, as well as Rideâs rise at NASA and journey to becoming the first American woman in space.Â
In the film, Kathy Sullivan, a scientist and former astronaut from Rideâs NASA class, also credits Ride with becoming âthe first woman to take stock of what they call crew equipment.âÂ
With Ride onboard, NASA engineers had to rethink the kind of âcrew equipment,â or toiletry kit, that was routinely provided for astronauts. They reassessed the conventional set of items, such as antiperspirant sticks and dental floss, so that the contents would be suitable for a woman. Â
âThey knew that a guy might want a shaving kit, but they didnât know what a female astronaut would take,â Ride explains in a historic clip. âAnd so the engineers at NASA, in their infinite wisdom, designed a makeup kit.âÂ
What Ride jokingly called âa makeup kit brought to you by NASA engineersâ included eye makeup remover, an eye-shading pencil and some version of lipstick, all wrapped up in a spring-loaded canvas bag.Â
The kit became more absurd when Ride said they asked how many tampons she should fly with for one week.Â
âHe asked me, âIs 100 the right number?â â Ride says with a laugh. âI said, âNo. That would not be the right number.â â
Sullivan recalls when Ride kept pulling tampons out of the bag, comparing it to âone of those exploding snakes in a party trick.â
Reflecting on the handful of women who were inducted into the historic NASA class with Ride, Sullivan says, âAll six of us for at least half a year would not have used every tampon that was in there.âÂ
While Ride jokingly revisits that episode in the documentary, she also addresses more serious matters, including her run-ins with the media. âThe only bad moments in our training involved the press,â she says.Â
Sally includes footage of reporters asking if Rideâs male colleagues âdeferâ to her or continue their âgentlemanly waysâ in training. In multiple clips, sheâs asked about children and whether she would be a mother.Â
âThey didnât care about how well-prepared I was to operate the arm or deploy communication satellites,â Ride says. âThey wanted to know what I thought was extraneous things.â
Sally will be screening at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival through Feb. 2 and available to view online from Jan. 30 to Feb. 3. Click here for more information.
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