NASA Engineers thought Sally Ride would need 100 tampons for one week in space. Ride, who became the first American woman in ...
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 ...
National Geographic premiered "SALLY," Cristina Costantini's new documentary about the first U.S. woman in space and her ...
The film tells the story of Sally Ride’s groundbreaking journey into space and the immense challenges she faced as a woman in ...
Filmmaker Cristina Costantini is leaving the Sundance Film Festival with an award and with distribution already secured for ...
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 ...
Sally Ride, the first American woman to fly in space, was a childhood hero to many, including Cristina Costantini. The director of “Sally,” a new documentary that chronicles both the public an ...
By Caryn James When Sally Ride died in 2012, she was praised as the first American woman in space, but there was much more to the story. Her obituaries let the world know a secret she had long ...
The first American woman to enter space is the subject of SALLY, Cristina Costantini’s documentary about the astronaut Sally ...
During one of the countless, often boneheaded interviews Sally Ride endured about her pioneering role in the United States space program, she schools a reporter on how to address her.
Sally Ride wanted to be remembered as being fearless. In reality, though, the first American woman to fly into space was scared — and it had nothing to do with her leaving the planet.