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Desert Island Discs

Commander Chris Hadfield

Desert Island Discs

BBC

Society & Culture, Music Commentary, Music, Personal Journals

4.413.7K Ratings

🗓️ 20 December 2015

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Kirsty Young's castaway is Chris Hadfield.

He was the first Canadian commander of the International Space Station and took part in three space missions spending a total of 166 days orbiting the Earth. He has spent over 14 hours doing two space walks.

He flew his first eight day mission into space in 1995 during which he visited the Russian space station Mir. In 2001 he paid his first visit to the International Space Station to help install Canadarm2, a robot arm helping to build the station which was launched three years previously. In 2012 he began his final five month stay in space on board the ISS. It was on this mission that his videos of life in space - including a film of him singing David Bowie's Space Oddity and accompanying himself on guitar - led to him enjoying a huge following on social media.

Chris was born in 1959 in Ontario, the second of five children: his father was a pilot and the family lived on a farm. He mapped out his future career aged nine when he watched Neil Armstrong become the first person to walk on the moon in 1969. In pursuit of his dream Chris first become an Air Cadet, then attended military college, becoming a fighter pilot and then a test pilot, as well as an aeronautical engineer. He finally achieved his ambition of becoming an astronaut in 1992.

He went onto become the Chief of Robotics at the NASA Astronaut Office and Chief of International Space Station Operations at the Johnson Space Centre in Houston, Texas. Following his final space mission, Chris retired from the Canadian Space Agency in July 2013. Amongst the awards he's received are the military Meritorious Service Cross, NASA's Exceptional Service Medal and the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Medal.

Producer: Cathy Drysdale.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello I'm Kirsty Young. Thank you for downloading this podcast of Desert Island Disks from BBC Radio 4.

0:06.0

For rights reasons, the music choices are shorter than in the radio broadcast.

0:10.0

For more information about the program, please visit BBC.co.uk.

0:17.0

Radio 4. My cast away this week is the astronaut Commander Chris Hadfield. He is an elite

0:38.6

test pilot and accomplished aeronautical engineer and one of very few people to have ever completed a speech. a

0:43.9

notautical engineer and one of very few people to have ever completed a spacewalk. But regardless of

0:47.2

his impressive string of top flight achievements, the simple truth is you might know

0:51.3

him best as the singing spac man more of that later his

0:54.9

story is the stuff of which movies are made as a boy he watched in wonder as Apollo

0:59.5

11 landed on the moon and at the moment human history was made, little Chris resolved that one

1:04.8

day he too would boldly go into space.

1:08.4

At basic jet training in the delightfully named Moose Jaw Saskatchewan, he graduated

1:12.4

top, but it was still a 12 year long

1:15.1

professional journey before he'd finally achieve his boyhood ambition. He

1:19.7

would go on to be the first Canadian commander of the International Space Station and his achievements were

1:25.0

recognized by having an airport, two schools and an asteroid named after him. He says,

1:31.1

to drift outside fully immersed in the spectacle of the universe whilst holding onto a spaceship orbiting Earth at 17,500 miles an hour

1:39.8

was a moment I'd been dreaming of and working hard towards most of my life.

1:44.6

And so welcome Chris Hatfield.

1:46.8

You know what it's like.

1:47.9

Can you try to explain to us what it's like then?

1:50.5

To be in that situation, to be immersed in the spectacle of the universe.

...

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