Lists of fictional astronauts | ||
---|---|---|
Early period | Project Mercury | Project Gemini |
Project Apollo | 1975–1989 | 1990–1999 |
2000–2009 | 2010–2029 | Moon |
Inner Solar System | Outer Solar System | Other |
Far future |
The following is a list of fictional astronauts from the era of Project Mercury and the Vostok programme, the beginning of the "Golden Age" of space travel.
Name(s) | Appeared in | Program / Mission / Spacecraft | Fictional date | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mercury (1960–1963) | ||||||
"Doc" Adams, Dr. (Space medicine expert) Ed Pete Tom (no last names given for last three) | Sea Hunt Diving for the Moon (1959), TV | Operation Moon Dive | Contemporary | |||
Candidates for first spacecraft crew take part in underwater survival test. [1] | ||||||
Terry (no last name given) | "Star Mother" (1959), short story | United States: Explorer XII | Near Future (April) | |||
Astronaut in one-man capsule struck by meteorite. [2] | ||||||
Clegg Forbes, Col. Ed Harrington, Col. William Gart, Maj. | The Twilight Zone And When the Sky Was Opened (1959), TV | United States Air Force: X-20 | Contemporary/Near Future | |||
Astronauts return from first crewed space flight and begin to vanish from the world and people's memories. [3] [4] [5] | ||||||
Adam Stepanic, Maj. | Assignment - Mara Tirana (1960), novel | Mercury? | Contemporary/Near Future (October) | |||
First American to make successful spaceflight. When his spacecraft malfunctions after 20 of 26 planned orbits he is forced to bring the craft down in Romania. Spacecraft launched by Atlas rocket with second-stage Thor-Able. [6] [7] | ||||||
Dave Armstrong (Australia) Peter Corbitt, Flt Lt (UK) Len Cassidy (US) Jeff Burrows (US) | The Astronauts (1960), TV movie | Unknown | Contemporary/Near Future | |||
Candidates to be first human in space. [8] [9] [10] [11] | ||||||
William Allison, Maj. | Beyond the Time Barrier (a.k.a. The Last Barrier) (1960), film | United States Air Force: X-80 | 1960 / 2024 | |||
Test pilot on suborbital flight in experimental aircraft travels into the future. [12] [13] | ||||||
Norman Puckle, Ordinary Seaman | The Bulldog Breed (1960), film | Royal Navy: Bosun | Contemporary | |||
Royal Navy launches ordinary recruit into space. [14] [15] | ||||||
Roy Selby (Army Signal Corps) | The Clear Horizon (1960–62), TV | United States | Contemporary | |||
Soap opera about astronauts at Cape Canaveral. [16] [17] | ||||||
Three unnamed astronauts | "Egocentric Orbit" (1960), short short story | Unknown (one-man capsules) | Contemporary/Near Future | |||
First three men in Earth orbit experience unexpected psychological effects. [18] [19] | ||||||
Thomas H. Morris | "The Long Way Back" (1960), short story | N/A | Near Future | |||
18 years after devastating nuclear war, historian Morris becomes the first man in space when he is launched aboard makeshift spacecraft to assemble solar power satellite and enable reconstruction of civilization. [20] [21] | ||||||
R. G. "Bob" Donlin, Col. (Commander) Corey (Flight Officer) Pierson (Flight Officer) Hudack (Navigator) | The Twilight Zone I Shot an Arrow into the Air (1960), TV | Project XX 2: Arrow One | Contemporary/Near Future | |||
Four survivors of eight-man crew crash on what they think is an asteroid, but turns out to be Nevada. [22] [23] [24] | ||||||
Joe Unnamed pilot | "X-15" (1960), song | X-15 | 1997 | |||
Two X-15 pilots race their planes around Earth. [25] | ||||||
Nicholai Soloviov, Dr. | Armchair Theatre The Man Out There (1961), TV | Soviet Union: Troika | Contemporary | |||
Cosmonaut trapped in orbit due to solar flare activity causing failure of escape tower to jettison. He assists Canadian family by radio. [26] [lower-alpha 1] | ||||||
Jose Jimenez | Jose Jimenez the Astronaut (1961), Jose Jimenez in Orbit (1962), LP records | Mercury | Contemporary | |||
Astronaut in the United States Interplanetary Expeditionary Force (USIEF). They were going to send a dog... but they thought that would be too cruel. | ||||||
Squarely Stable | N/A (Early 1960s) | Mercury | Contemporary | |||
Husband of Primly Stable, super-perfect astronaut wife in skits performed by Rene Carpenter and other Mercury wives. [27] [28] | ||||||
Michael Alfred Robert Samson ("Mike Mars") Johnny Bluehawk Jack Lannigan Rodney Harger Joseph Stacey Orin McMahan Hart Williams Todd Larner | Mike Mars series (1961–1966), novels | Project Quicksilver (X-15, Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, S-IVB space station) | Contemporary (1962–1969) | |||
Astronauts in a project paralleling the actual Mercury, Gemini and Apollo projects. [29] | ||||||
Margaret MacKenzie, Lt. | Tarzan, King of the Jungle #51 The Lost Astronaut (1961), comic | Operation High Ball | Contemporary | |||
NASA launches a young female pilot into space on a Mercury test flight. The mission goes wrong and in an emergency re-entry, the astronaut narrowly escapes death when her capsule lands in a central African lake. Tarzan rescues her and helps her return to civilization and her home in Massachusetts. [30] | ||||||
Campbell (First name not given) Dennis "Den" Lynds Harry Jackson, Capt. Forrest (First name not given) | "What Need of Man?" (1961), short story | Project Argus | Contemporary/Near Future | |||
Astronauts involved in the testing of a fully automated winged orbital re-entry vehicle. [31] | ||||||
Matt Powell (NASA) | X-15 (a.k.a. Time of Departure, X-15, Time of Departure) (1961), film | X-15 | Contemporary | |||
Test pilot (loosely based on Joseph A. Walker) flies X-15 to the edge of space. [32] [33] [34] | ||||||
Four unnamed astronauts "Dead-Eye" Dick Williamson, Maj. Gabby Stark, Col. Pluto III/Pluto IV: Lucius L. "Lucky" Lucas, Col. Pluto V: Myron Philpot Phipps, Maj. (Ph.D.) | The Astronaut (1962), novel | United States Air Force Project Pluto: Pluto III Pluto IV Pluto V | Contemporary | |||
Military Earth-orbit project in competition with U.S. Army and Navy efforts. Lucas' death is falsely announced to cover up Pluto IV launch failure; Phipps becomes first American in orbit on Pluto V. [35] | ||||||
Mike Sklorski, Maj. (US) | The Big Pull (1962), TV | Unknown | Contemporary/Near Future | |||
First astronaut to pass through Van Allen radiation belt dies, then begins to merge with other people. [36] | ||||||
Howard Judgen, Maj. | First Through Time (aka The Time Factor) (1962), novel | Unspecified [lower-alpha 2] | Contemporary/Near Future | |||
Astronaut reassigned from the space program to take part in a time travel experiment. [38] | ||||||
Caroline Baker, Maj. | The Adventures of Little Archie The Missing Astronaut Mystery (1963), comic | Mercury-Atlas | 1963 | |||
Major Caroline Baker prepares to become the first female astronaut by making a brief solo spaceflight on a late Mercury-Atlas mission. After being launched successfully, Baker's re-entry is far off course; Soviet agents kidnap her when she splashes down. [39] | ||||||
(USAF) Matt Crispin Duke Dalmead George Raccoli (USN) Bruce Blair Rupert Meredith | A Flight of Chariots (1963), novel | Mercury Columbia 12 | Contemporary | |||
Fictional astronauts added to the original Mercury Seven four months after they were selected. Matt Crispin's flight in Columbia 12 ends with an emergency landing in the Gibson Desert when the oxygen system fails. [40] [41] | ||||||
Steve Crandon | The Outer Limits "The Man with the Power" (1963), TV | Unknown | Contemporary/Near Future | |||
Astronaut recruited for telekinetic asteroid mining project. [42] | ||||||
Joseph Reardon, Capt. | The Outer Limits "The Man Who Was Never Born" (1963), TV | Unknown | 1963 | |||
Astronaut who travels through "time convulsion" in Earth orbit and finds himself on post-apocalyptic Earth in 2148. [43] [44] [45] | ||||||
Sid Stein (Commander) Mike Seaman, Dr. (Communications Corporation [COMCORP]) (Engineer) | "The Trouble with Telstar" (1963), short story | Dyna-Soar Nelly Bly | Contemporary/Near Future | |||
Astronauts launched to carry out the first in-space repair of a malfunctioning satellite. [46] | ||||||
Robert Gaines, Maj./ Robert Gaines, Col. | Twilight Zone "The Parallel" (1963), TV | Mercury? MX Ten (Phoebus Ten)/Astro Seven | Contemporary/Near Future | |||
Astronaut visits parallel universe where John F. Kennedy is not the U.S. President. [47] [48] [49] [50] | ||||||
John Jameson, Col. | The Amazing Spider-Man , Spider-Man Unlimited , Spider-Man 2 (1963–present), comics, TV, and film | Mercury, Apollo | Contemporary | |||
NASA astronaut afflicted with lycanthropy. | ||||||
Andy (no last name given) | Andy Astronaut (1968), picture book | Unknown (one-man capsule) | Contemporary | |||
Profile of typical astronaut's career and spaceflight. [51] | ||||||
Hal Brennan, Col. Michael Barnes, Dr. | Countdown (1970), novel | NASA: Hermes program | Early 1960s | |||
Astronauts in follow-up program to Mercury, using one-man Hermes spacecraft launched by Titan rockets. Barnes is nearly killed on program's final mission due to oxygen system failure. [52] | ||||||
Unnamed cosmonaut | Top Secret "Codename: Cancer (The Crab)" (1987), role playing game | Vostok | 1963 | |||
Soviet cosmonaut launched aboard a modified Vostok designed to be used as a nuclear bomber. Dies of oxygen starvation when his spacecraft is launched into a higher than planned orbit. [53] | ||||||
Maurice Minnifield | Northern Exposure (1990–1995), TV | Mercury | Contemporary | |||
Former NASA astronaut living in Alaska. | ||||||
Amerika Bomber/Silbervogel: Horst Reinhardt, [lower-alpha 3] Lt. (Luftwaffe) Lucky Linda: Rudy "Skid" Sloman, Lt. (Army Air Force) (Capt., USN, in short story) (Pilot) Joe McPherson (Backup pilot) [lower-alpha 4] U.S. Space Force: Gerry Mander [lower-alpha 5] | "Goddard's People" (a.k.a. "Operation Blue Horizon") (1991), short story V-S Day (2014), novel | Luftwaffe: Silbervogel ("Silver Bird") (A-9 Amerika Bomber in short story) United States Army Air Force: Operation Blue Horizon X-1 (Lucky Linda) | January 19, 1942 – May 26, 1944 (Alternate History) / 1991 (Alternate History) (short story) August 20, 1941 – June 1, 1943 (Alternate History) / June 1, 2013 (Alternate History) (novel) | |||
Alternate history in which Nazi Germany and the US launch first crewed spaceflights in 1943 (1944 in short story). Mander, one of the engineers who builds Lucky Linda, later becomes an astronaut, serves on space station and travels to Moon. Set in same timeline as Steele's short story "John Harper Wilson" and novel The Tranquillity Alternative (q.v.). [54] [55] [56] | ||||||
Alex Dan Carl (no last names given) Unnamed pilots | The Blue Ball (1995), play | Unknown | 1960s | |||
Early space program of unspecified country. Alex is the first man in space, with Dan as his backup. Dan and Carl experience emergency on subsequent mission. [57] | ||||||
Charles Jones | Voyage (1996), novel | Mercury | Early 1960s (Alternate History) | |||
Second American to orbit Earth (on mission similar to Mercury-Atlas 7) in alternate history in which President Kennedy is wounded, and Jacqueline Kennedy killed, in November 1963 shooting. [58] | ||||||
Project Mercury: Wayne, Col. (no first name given) Aspire 7: Theodore Harris, Col. Daedalus: Sullivan, Maj. (Commander) Carlton Powers (Co-Pilot) Ted Harris, Col. (Host Lecturer) Martin Reese (Journalist) Lil Vaughn (Passenger) Ty Chafey (Passenger) Barbara Chafey (Passenger) | The Outer Limits "Joyride" (1999), TV | Mercury: Aspire 7 Powers Industries: XR-141 (Daedalus) (Single-stage-to-orbit spaceplane) | September 16, 1963 2001 | |||
Thirty-eight years after seeing strange lights in orbit on Mercury flight, Harris seizes chance to return to space aboard commercial spaceplane. [59] | ||||||
Lloyd Macadam, Col. (AIT) Bricker (USSR) | Astronauts in Trouble: Space: 1959 (2000), graphic novel | Aerospace Intelligence Taskforce (AIT) (part of USAF) | 1959 | |||
When Soviet agent Bricker commandeers secret US Moon rocket, Col. Macadam climbs aboard as rocket takes off to make sure that first man on Moon is American. [60] | ||||||
Zipp Codwin, Col. (USAF) (NASA Administrator) | The Destroyer The Wrong Stuff (2001), novel | Mercury | October 2001 | |||
NASA Administrator is former astronaut who flew two Mercury missions. [61] | ||||||
Katerina Vasiliyevna Taraskaya, Jr. Lt. | Red Moon (2001), novel | Vostok | c. 1963 | |||
A supporting character is the young and powerful Col. Katerina Borazova. Four years earlier, when merely Jr. Lt. Taraskaya, she had been launched into orbit after the Soviet premier personally selected her to be the first woman in space. Character is loosely based on Valentina Tereshkova. [62] | ||||||
Alkilina Mikhailovna Chirikova, Jr. Lt. | Paragaea (2006), novel | Vostok | 1964 | |||
This novel begins in 1964, with the Soviet Union's second female cosmonaut Jr. Lt. Akilina Chirikova, already aboard Vostok 7, waiting nervously to be blasted into Earth orbit. To her relief, she is launched successfully, but after a couple of uneventful orbits, her ship enters a wormhole, and subsequently she lands in another world, a parallel Earth, called Paragaea. [63] | ||||||
Carl Bell, Capt. (USAF) | Fallout 3 (2008), video game | United States Space Administration (USSA): Defiance 7 (Mercury-like) | May 5, 1961 (Alternate History) | |||
In this video game taking place in 2277, exactly 200 years after a nuclear war, the player can visit the Museum of Technology in the ruins of Washington D.C. The game (and the rest of the series) takes place in an alternate timeline that diverges from reality after World War II. One aspect of this timeline is that the United States was consistently ahead of the Soviet Union in the Space Race, unlike reality, where the US lagged behind it in the 1950s and early 1960s, although as in reality, the US still won the space race by beating the Soviets to the Moon and landing there in July 1969. As part of its exhibit on the Space Race, the museum details a slightly different version of Mercury-Redstone 3/Freedom 7 called Defiance 7, launched on May 5, 1961 (the day Freedom 7 was launched) by the United States Space Administration (USSA), the timeline's version of NASA, and piloted by US Air Force Captain Carl Bell. The flight lasted 12 minutes and 7 seconds and made one full revolution around the Earth. It is explicitly stated that Carl Bell was the first person in space (with no mention of Yuri Gagarin, the Soviet cosmonaut who holds the title in reality). Unlike Gagarin or Freedom 7's Alan Shepard (who was the first American in space), Bell did not survive his spaceflight, having died in a crash landing. Carl Bell's widow, Edwina Bell, donated Carl's space suit and skeleton to the museum and both are on display there. Both of the main Communist states of the time, the Soviet Union and China, disputed the United States' claim of sending a human into space first. [64] | ||||||
Francine Barry | Children of Orion (2010), online novel | Mercury | September 1963 (Alternate History) | |||
In this alternative history novel female pilots are included in NASA's 1962 astronaut group. One of them is to fly a Mercury mission before that program ends and become the first woman in space. Francine Barry, a 31-year-old civilian test pilot, is selected for the task. The Soviets fly a woman cosmonaut first, but the confident Ms. Barry still rides into orbit on the final Mercury-Atlas, designed Serenity 7.[ citation needed ] | ||||||
Unnamed cosmonaut | Yulia (2010), song/music video | Vostok? | Unknown | |||
Cosmonaut on solo mission is doomed by malfunction while his wife/girlfriend watches on television. [65] | ||||||
Unnamed cosmonaut | The Last Cosmonaut (2011), short film | Vostok? | April 5, 1958 | |||
Cosmonaut on secret pre-Gagarin mission aborts reentry. [66] | ||||||
Yelena Z. Kovalovski, Lt. | The Sea of Okhotsk (2011), novel | Vostok | November 1963 | |||
Fantasy novel in which veteran Soviet Air Force flight instructor Lt. Yelena Kovalovski becomes the second woman in space, aboard Vostok 7. [67] [68] | ||||||
Natalya Dmitrievna Kubasova, Lt. | Sparrow's Flight (2011), novel | Vostok | September 1960 | |||
In September 1960, the Soviet Union is ready to launch the first human into space. A female Soviet Air Force pilot, Lt. Natalya Kubasova, is launched in a Vostok capsule, but just after reaching orbit, the capsule malfunctions and the cosmonaut plunges to Earth, landing in the American mid-West. [69] | ||||||
Arthur Whitman | Waltz for One (2012), short film | Whitman Enterprises: Omega 7 (Mercury-like) | 1960s | |||
"Wealthy eccentric" Whitman attempts to set solo space endurance record. [70] | ||||||
Unnamed American astronaut | Hoax Hunters Issue Nº.0 (2013), online comic | Mercury | 1961 and Contemporary | |||
Astronaut launched into orbit prior to John Glenn to investigate Soviet space activity. He and the crow accidentally launched with him are bizarrely affected when exposed to Zero-point energy. [lower-alpha 6] [71] | ||||||
Tatyana Fedorova, Capt. Alexander Mikhailov, Maj. | Into the Silent Sea (2013), short film | Vostok 5B | 1963 | |||
In early 1963, the Politburo presses leaders of the space program to put Captain Fedorova, trainee cosmonaut and daughter of a senior Party official, into space on the Vostok 5B mission. When launch is brought forward, the risks of a mission failure increase. Fedorova is deemed too well-connected to be risked, so is replaced by Mikhailov. After a successful launch, he becomes stranded in orbit, and losing contact with his base, his final contact with Earth is with an Italian radio operator. | ||||||
Unnamed cosmonaut | The Landing (2013), short film | Vostok | August 6, 1960 – April 12, 1961 / Contemporary | |||
First Soviet in space is killed by American farmer after crash landing. [72] | ||||||
Liza Olegovna Klubnikova, Jr. Lt. | Notte Dell’Avvenire (2013), Italian language novel | Vostok 7 | 1963 | |||
This novel spans the period 1960 to 1989. After being plucked from a parachute club for selection as a cosmonaut, Klubnikova is nominated to go into space on Vostok 7, in 1963. Her belief in the Soviet system, and what she calls 'the Dream', gives her reassurance that the dangerous mission will be a success. However, during launch, she suffers hallucinations, due to oxygen starvation and anxiety, and loses contact with Earth. Three days later, she survives a crash landing, but is spirited away after her spaceflight and forced to present a false portrayal of her mission for propaganda purposes. Her belief in the Soviet system is shaken, and she is spirited away to live in obscurity in Berlin. In 1989, with the Soviet Union crumbling, she finally breaks her silence about her trip into space. [73] | ||||||
Unnamed cosmonaut | Kosmonauta (2014), short film | Vostok | May 23, 1961 | |||
Female lost cosmonaut featured in allegedly authentic recording by Judica-Cordiglia brothers. [74] | ||||||
Alexei (no last name given) | Ad Astra (2016), short film | Vostok | c. early 1960s | |||
Cosmonaut who experiences emergency prior to reentry. [75] | ||||||
Vladimir Felixovich Gogol | Blue Darker Than Black (2016), novel | Vostok | Early 1960s | |||
Cosmonaut who flew three secret ten-day military missions concurrent with publicly acknowledged Vostok program. In 1964, at the end of his third flight, he crash-landed in China and spent 40 months among Mongolian nomads. [76] | ||||||
Guy Taylor, Cmdr. | Capsule (2016), film | Hermes | December 4, 1959 | |||
British pilot on secret Earth-orbital mission launched from Woomera. [77] [78] | ||||||
Oliver Grier, Cmdr. | Anomaly (2019), short film | NASA Anomaly Program: Anomaly 1 (Mercury-like) | Late 1960s (through December) | |||
Astronaut on mission to launch space telescope. [79] | ||||||
Unnamed astronaut | Infinity 7 (2019), short film | Mercury: Infinity 7 | Early 1960s | |||
Mercury astronaut stranded in orbit due to electrical malfunction and retrofire failure. [80] | ||||||
William Florescu, Cmd. | The Astronaut of God (2020), film | United States: US Genesis 1491 (Mercury-like) | January 2, 1962 | |||
Romanian American astronaut on solo Earth-orbital mission to investigate the possible presence of God. Florescu is the fifth human in space. [81] | ||||||
Sacha Grishna Alina Vitat' 4: Unnamed cosmonaut | "Orbit" (2020), short story | Vostok?: Vitat' 4 | c. 1960 | |||
Third man in space reflects on how he, like his predecessors, will be erased from history. [82] |
The Twilight Zone is an American media franchise based on the anthology television series created by Rod Serling in which characters find themselves dealing with often disturbing or unusual events, an experience described as entering "the Twilight Zone". The episodes are in various genres, including fantasy, science fiction, absurdism, dystopian fiction, suspense, horror, supernatural drama, black comedy, and psychological thriller, frequently concluding with a macabre or unexpected twist, and usually with a moral. A popular and critical success, it introduced many Americans to common science fiction and fantasy tropes. The first series, shot entirely in black-and-white, ran on CBS for five seasons from 1959 to 1964.
Rodman Edward Serling was an American screenwriter and television producer best known for his live television dramas of the 1950s and his anthology television series The Twilight Zone. Serling was active in politics, both on and off the screen, and helped form television industry standards. He was known as the "angry young man" of Hollywood, clashing with television executives and sponsors over a wide range of issues, including censorship, racism, and war.
"Where Is Everybody?" is the first episode of the American anthology television series The Twilight Zone and was originally broadcast on 2 October 1959, on CBS. It is one of the most realistic Twilight Zone episodes, as it features no supernatural elements and is based on fairly straightforward extrapolation of science.
"Time Enough at Last" is the eighth episode of the American anthology series The Twilight Zone, first airing on November 20, 1959. The episode was adapted from a short story by Lynn Venable, which appeared in the January 1953 edition of If: Worlds of Science Fiction.
"Eye of the Beholder" is episode 42 of the American television anthology series The Twilight Zone. It originally aired on November 11, 1960, on CBS.
An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge is a 1961 French short film, almost without dialogue. It was based on the 1890 American short story of the same name by American Civil War soldier, wit, and writer Ambrose Bierce. It was directed by Robert Enrico and produced by Marcel Ichac and Paul de Roubaix with music by Henri Lanoë. It won awards at the Cannes Film Festival and the Academy Awards. The film was later screened on American television as episode 22 of the fifth season of The Twilight Zone on 28 February 1964.
Twilight Zone literature is an umbrella term for the many books and comic books which concern or adapt The Twilight Zone television series.
The Twilight Zone is an American fantasy science fiction horror anthology television series created and presented by Rod Serling, which ran for five seasons on CBS from October 2, 1959, to June 19, 1964. Each episode presents a standalone story in which characters find themselves dealing with often disturbing or unusual events, an experience described as entering "the Twilight Zone", often with a surprise ending and a moral. Although often considered predominantly science-fiction, the show's paranormal and Kafkaesque events leaned the show much closer to fantasy and horror. The phrase "twilight zone", inspired by the series, is used to describe surreal experiences.
Marc Scott Zicree is an American science fiction author, television writer and screenwriter. Zicree has written for major studios and networks including Paramount, Universal, Disney, Sony/Columbia Tri-Star, MGM, New Line, CBS, NBC, ABC, Fox, WB, UPN, Showtime, PBS, Turner, USA Networks, Syfy, Discovery, Nickelodeon, the BBC, Marvel and NPR. His credits include Star Trek: The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, The Twilight Zone, Babylon 5, Beauty and the Beast, Forever Knight, Sliders, Friday the 13th: The Series, Liberty's Kids, Super Friends, He-Man and the Masters of the Universe, Real Ghostbusters, The Smurfs and many others, as well as pilots for CBS, NBC, ABC and Showtime.
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