Gene Cernan has been to space three times, to the Moon twice, and walked on its surface in 1972. In fact, he’s the last man to step foot on the Moon. But a new biographical documentary aptly titled The Last Man on the Moon doesnât focus on Cernanâs life — itâs about his story, one that he hopes will inspire future generations to dream the impossible and make it happen.
Cernanâs career is pretty outstanding. A graduate of Purdue University, he joined the United States Navy as an aviator and was commissioned as an Ensign through the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps. During his tenure he logged more than 5,000 hours in the air, 4,800 of which were done in jet aircraft, but it didnât put him on a track to space. He watched as the first group of astronauts became national heroes and knew he wouldnât be among them. He didnât meet the qualifications. He was, in his own words, a âred hot arrogant jet pilotâ but he wasnât a test pilot.
The Navy had other ideas. He was handpicked by the Navy Department of Special Projects as a candidate for NASAâs astronaut corps. A couple of months after a strange trip to Houston where he was among 400 ace pilots all checked into the same hotel under the name Max Peck, Cernan got a call from NASA. Against all odds, he had been selected as one of the agencyâs third group of 14 astronauts. It was a âGolly, why me?â moment that for Cernan underscored the role of fate in his life.
Cernan spent three years learning how to be an astronaut before he made his first trip to space as the pilot of Gemini 9. His main task on the flight was to test a jet pack-like maneuvering system. But it was still early days for NASA; the agency was still figuring out how to really work in space. He never tested the jet pack. The effort of retrieving and putting it on was so physically taxing it nearly killed him.
It was typical for NASA to run into unexpected problems. The agency trained its astronauts and flight controllers to deal with problems, but they couldnât imagine all the problems that might crop up in flight. As Cernan describes the era, everyone working at NASA at the time was both âsmart and arrogant enoughâ to find ways out of bad situations. Everyone accepted that the astronauts were putting themselves in a hostile environment. The best they could do was be as technically smart about it as possible. âIf youâre afraid of not getting back,â he says, âthen you shouldnât go.â
Cernanâs second flight was as the Lunar Module Pilot on Apollo 10, NASAâs dress rehearsal for Apollo 11âs landing. He and commander Tom Stafford took the Lunar Module Snoopy towards the Moon but didnât land; they stopped about 60 nautical miles from the surface. But Cernan went all the way on his last flight. As the commander of Apollo 17, he has spent more time than any man on the lunar surface, returned more samples, and left the last bootprints in the dust. He says he was aware that those prints would last forever, but in also felt certain there would be more bootprints on the Moon some day.
So while The Last Man on the Moon is all about Cernanâs life and spaceflights, he isnât its subject. The movie is about his story, a story that he wants to preserve for the next generation of kids. Growing up, Cernanâs father only wanted his son to get the education he never got, and Cernan wanted to fly planes. He did both, got an education and learned to fly, and though there was no space program at the time it was the first step on his path to space. He says that fate was instrumental in getting him to the Moon, but he also believed in himself and took chances to get where he did.
Everyone has the right stuff embedded in them, Cernan says. âThe right stuff to me is if you believe what youâre doing is the right thing to do and [are] willing to accept the challenge and accept the risk to get it done.â The movie isnât about space or about Cernan, itâs about tapping into that right stuff that everyone has. Whatever you do, Cernan says, just do your best, and youâll surprise yourself.
Whether youâre an Apollo fanatic or just like a good inspiring story, Last Man on the Moon is compelling and well worth watching. The film premieres tonight at the SXSW festival in Austin, Texas.
—
IMAGES: NASA
HELL YES! Gene Cernan is an American Treasure!
I have often wondered what it would be like to close the hatch on the last mission to the moon, knowing the final Apollo Missions were in Jeopardy. That is real nerve.
God Bless Gene Cernan, Charlie Duke and John Young. Right Stuff, everyone.