In October, Disney+ will debut its new series, The Right Stuff, based on the 1979 book by Tom Wolfe.

A team of elite military test pilots finds itself tapped to be astronauts for Project Mercury, the first human spaceflight program in the United States, in The Right Stuff, a new eight-episode dramatic series debuting in October on Disney+. Like Philip Kaufman's Oscar-winning 1983 film of the same name, the series is based on the bestselling 1979 book by Tom Wolfe.

Wolfe became interested in the US space program while on assignment by Rolling Stone to cover the launch of Apollo 17, NASA's last Moon mission. He spent the next seven years writing The Right Stuff, intent on capturing the drive and ethos of those early astronauts. (In a foreword to the 1983 edition, he pondered "What makes a man willing to sit up on top of an enormous Roman candle… and wait for someone to light the fuse.") Wolfe spent a great deal of time consulting with General Chuck Yeager, who was shut out of the astronaut program and ended up as a contrasting character to the college-degreed Project Mercury team featured in the book. The Right Stuff won widespread critical praise, as well as the National Book Award for Nonfiction.

When United Artists decided to finance a film adaptation, the studio hired William Goldman (The Princess Bride) to adapt the screenplay, but his vision was very different from that of director Philip Kaufman, and Goldman quit the project. Kaufman wrote his own draft script in eight weeks, making Yeager more of a central figure; Goldman's script ignored Yeager entirely. Goldman later wrote that "Phil [Kaufman]'s heart was with Yeager. And not only that, he felt the astronauts, rather than being heroic, were really minor leaguers, mechanical men of no particular quality, not great pilots at all, simply the product of hype."

The film bombed at the box office, grossing $21 million against its $27 million budget, but it was a critical success and went on to win four Oscars. Wolfe himself disliked Kaufman's film, and there were some objections to historically inaccurate details. The most egregious example was a scene when the Liberty Bell 7 spacecraft sinks after splashdown. The film shows a panicked Gus Grissom deliberately detonating the hatch's explosive bolts—something that, in reality, NASA later determined had been a mechanical failure. (Grissom was tragically killed in the Apollo 1 launchpad fire in January 1967.)

Produced for National Geographic by Appian Way (Leonardo DiCaprio's production company) and Warner Bros. Television, the new series also draws heavily on Wolfe's book as source material. "The Right Stuff evokes the wonder and awe of the moment we first escaped the bounds of our only home and ventured into the unknown," showrunner Mark Lafferty told Deadline Hollywood in May. "But the show is as much about who we are today as it is about our historic achievements. At a time when the world is confronted with significant challenges, this story reminds us that what seems impossible today can become the triumph of tomorrow.”

  • Rocket launches always draw the crowds. YouTube/Disney+
  • Waiting expectantly. YouTube/Disney+
  • Josh Cooke as LIFE reporter Loudon Wainwright Jr., on hand to capture the moment for posterity. YouTube/Disney+
  • Introducing the astronauts. YouTube/Disney+
  • Those chosen become instant national celebrities. YouTube/Disney+
  • The astronauts were selected from a pool of military test pilots. YouTube/Disney+
  • Patrick J. Adams plays Marine test pilot Maj. John Glenn YouTube/Disney+
  • Jake McDorman as Lt. Commander Alan Shepard. YouTube/Disney+
  • Scientists test the recruits' physical condtioning YouTube/Disney+
  • Astronaut in a multi-axis trailer. YouTube/Disney+
  • Checking out a prototype. YouTube/Disney+
  • The astronauts' wives had to put on a brave cheerful face. YouTube/Disney+
  • We have liftoff! YouTube/Disney+
  • Game faces on. YouTube/Disney+
  • A catastrophic setback. YouTube/Disney+
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