logo
Jim Lovell, commander of NASA's Apollo 13 moon mission, dies at 97

Jim Lovell, commander of NASA's Apollo 13 moon mission, dies at 97

Straits Times3 days ago
FILE PHOTO: Apollo 13 astronaut Jim Lovell (L to R), former NASA Administrator Dan Goldin, Sen. John Glenn and NASA Administrator Charles Bolden talk at a private memorial service celebrating the life of Neil Armstrong at the Camargo Club in Cincinnati, Ohio in this August 31, 2012 NASA handout photo/File Photo
WASHINGTON - American astronaut Jim Lovell, commander of the failed 1970 mission to the moon that nearly ended in disaster but became an inspirational saga of survival and the basis for the hit movie "Apollo 13," has died at the age of 97, NASA said on Friday.
Hollywood superstar Tom Hanks played Lovell in director Ron Howard's acclaimed 1995 film. It recounted NASA's Apollo 13 mission, which was planned as humankind's third lunar landing but went horribly wrong when an onboard explosion on the way to the moon put the lives of the three astronauts in grave danger.
Lovell and crew mates Jack Swigert and Fred Haise endured frigid, cramped conditions, dehydration and hunger for 3-1/2 days while concocting with Mission Control in Houston ingenious solutions to bring the crippled spacecraft safely back to Earth.
"A 'successful failure' describes exactly what (Apollo) 13 was - because it was a failure in its initial mission - nothing had really been accomplished," Lovell told Reuters in 2010 in an interview marking the 40th anniversary of the flight.
The outcome, the former Navy test pilot said, was "a great success in the ability of people to take an almost-certain catastrophe and turn it into a successful recovery."
The Apollo 13 mission came nine months after Neil Armstrong had become the first person to walk on the moon when he took "one giant leap for mankind" during the Apollo 11 mission on July 20, 1969.
There was drama even before Apollo 13's launch on April 11, 1970. Days earlier, the backup lunar module pilot inadvertently exposed the crew to German measles but Lovell and Haise were immune to it. Ken Mattingly, the command module pilot, had no immunity to measles and was replaced at the last minute by rookie astronaut Swigert.
Top stories
Swipe. Select. Stay informed.
Singapore PM Wong calls on S'poreans to band together for nation to remain exceptional in National Day message
Singapore Nation building is every Singaporean's responsibility, not the work of one party alone: Pritam
Singapore Four foreign leaders to attend NDP 2025 at the Padang
Singapore 'This is home', for retired shop owner putting up 11th flag display in Toa Payoh to mark SG60
Singapore Singapore leaders send congratulatory letters to South Korean counterparts to mark 50 years of ties
Singapore Relaxed rules 'not a silver bullet', but a step in right direction, say nightlife businesses
Business Singapore's digital banks trim deposit rates, mirroring moves by incumbent players
Singapore Chief Justice allows founder of site that ran fake KKH story to be called to the Bar
The mission generally went smoothly for its first two days. But moments after the crew finished a TV broadcast showing how they lived in space, an exposed wire in a command module oxygen tank sparked an explosion that badly damaged the spacecraft 200,000 miles (320,000 km) from Earth. The accident not only ruined their chances of landing on the moon but imperiled their lives.
"Suddenly there's a 'hiss-bang. And the spacecraft rocks back and forth,'" Lovell said in a 1999 NASA oral history interview. "The lights come on and jets fire. And I looked at Haise to see if he knew what caused it. He had no idea. Looked at Jack Swigert. He had no idea. And then, of course, things started to happen."
'HOUSTON, WE HAVE A PROBLEM'
Swigert saw a warning light and told Mission Control: "Houston, we've had a problem here." In the movie, the line is instead attributed to Lovell and famously delivered by Hanks - slightly reworded - as: "Houston, we have a problem."
With a dangerous loss of power, the three astronauts abandoned the command module and went to the lunar module - designed for two men to land on the moon. They used it as a lifeboat for a harrowing 3-1/2 day return to Earth.
The astronauts and the U.S. space agency experts in Houston scrambled to figure out how to get the crew safely home with a limited amount of equipment at their disposal.
Electrical systems were turned off to save energy, sending temperatures plummeting to near freezing. Water was drastically rationed, food was short and sleep was nearly impossible. The crew had to contrive a filter system to remove high levels of carbon dioxide that could have proven deadly.
"The thought crossed our mind that we were in deep trouble. But we never dwelled on it," Lovell said in the NASA interview. "We never admitted to ourselves that, 'Hey, we're not going to make it.' Well, only one time - when Fred looked at ... the lunar module and found out we had about 45 hours worth of power and we were 90 hours from home."
People worldwide were captivated by the events unfolding in space - and got a happy ending. The astronauts altered course to fly a single time around the moon and back to Earth, splashing down in the Pacific Ocean near Samoa on April 17, 1970.
Lovell never got another chance to walk on the moon after Apollo 13, which was his fourth and final space trip.
His first trip had been the Gemini 7 mission in 1965, featuring the first link-up of two manned spacecraft. His second was Gemini 12 in 1966, the last of the programs that led to the Apollo moon missions.
Lovell's third mission was Apollo 8 in December 1968, the first to orbit the moon. During a telecast to Earth from their spacecraft on Christmas Eve, Lovell and crew mates Frank Borman and William Anders read verses from the Bible's Book of Genesis.
Lovell, who later had a moon crater named in his honor, retired as an astronaut in 1973, working first for a harbor towing company and then in telecommunications.
He co-authored a 1994 book, "Lost Moon: The Perilous Voyage of Apollo 13," that became the basis for Howard's film. Lovell recalled a meeting with Howard in which the director asked the astronaut which actor he would want to play him.
"I said, 'Kevin Costner,'" Lovell said. "And Hanks never lets me forget that... But Hanks did a great job."
Lovell made a cameo appearance in the film as the commander of the U.S. Navy ship that retrieves the astronauts and shakes hands with Hanks.
James Lovell was born in Cleveland on March 25, 1928. He was just 5 when his father died and his mother moved the family to Milwaukee. He became interested in space as a teenager. He graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1952 and became a test pilot before being selected as a NASA astronaut in 1962.
He had four children with his wife, Marilyn. REUTERS
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Who Was Kevin Mares? American Tourist Shot Dead While Visiting Puerto Rico to Watch Bad Bunny Concert
Who Was Kevin Mares? American Tourist Shot Dead While Visiting Puerto Rico to Watch Bad Bunny Concert

International Business Times

time16 minutes ago

  • International Business Times

Who Was Kevin Mares? American Tourist Shot Dead While Visiting Puerto Rico to Watch Bad Bunny Concert

A U.S. tourist in Puerto Rico for a Bad Bunny concert was shot dead in a notoriously dangerous San Juan area on Sunday, authorities said. Kevin Mares, 25, was shot twice before he died early Sunday in La Perla, a seaside slum near Old San Juan, while he was on the island to attend Bad Bunny's concert series. Mares, a committed veterinary student from New York, was planning to propose to his longtime girlfriend this fall, his heartbroken mother told the New York Daily News. Mares is believed to have been an innocent bystander when a fight broke out between two people nearby and one of them suddenly opened fire. Wrong Place, Wrong Time Kevin Mares Instagram One of the men allegedly pulled a gun and began shooting, hitting at least three people. Mares was struck on the left side of his abdomen and taken to the island's main public hospital, where he died. Mares had traveled to Puerto Rico with three friends to watch the famed local rapper perform as part of a 30-show residency that has attracted thousands of American visitors to the Caribbean island and U.S. territory. Kevin Mares with hsi girlfriend Instagram The 25-year-old from East Elmhurst, Queens, was juggling two part-time jobs while pursuing his veterinary studies, according to his family, CBS News reported. "We want justice," his mother Sandra Mares told the outlet. Mares had been eagerly looking forward to the trip to Puerto Rico with his girlfriend for months and was an avid Bad Bunny fan, his grieving parents shared. Loved ones described Mares as "a deeply loved son, devoted friend, and a source of inspiration to everyone who knew him" in a GoFundMe set up to help raise money to bring his body back home. Kevin Mares GoFundMe "His wholehearted kindness, adventurous spirit, and unwavering commitment to family made him a pillar of strength for his loved ones," the fundraising page read. "Family was at the center of everything he did, and his sudden passing has left an unfillable void in our lives," loved ones wrote on the page. Tributes Pour In CBS reported that Mares is also survived by his 15-year-old brother. Local police told NBC 6 that the gunman is still on the loose. "We have very little information," said San Juan detective Sgt. Arnaldo Ruiz. Kevin Mares with his girlfriend Instagram La Perla has carried a long-standing reputation for crime and violence spanning decades. Once a hub for drug trafficking, the area was considered so dangerous for visitors that police largely avoided it and even put up warning signs advising people to stay away. Although a large federal raid in 2011 reduced some of the problems, the neighborhood remains unsafe. In 2023, two visitors were stabbed after somebody got angry that they were recording video there, and in 2024, a tourist from Delaware was killed and set on fire following a drug deal. Mares' family is coordinating with local officials in Puerto Rico to return his body to Queens for funeral preparations, according to CBS. They have also called on anyone with knowledge about the shooting to speak up.

Pixar film-maker, We Bare Bears creator Daniel Chong on the lessons his S'porean parents taught him
Pixar film-maker, We Bare Bears creator Daniel Chong on the lessons his S'porean parents taught him

Straits Times

timea day ago

  • Straits Times

Pixar film-maker, We Bare Bears creator Daniel Chong on the lessons his S'porean parents taught him

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Daniel Chong is the writer and director of Pixar comedy-adventure Hoppers, which is expected to open in Singapore cinemas in March 2026. LOS ANGELES – In the upcoming Pixar adventure comedy Hoppers, a young scientist uses a new technology that lets her mind 'hop' into the body of a lifelike robotic beaver. Now able to communicate with real beavers and other animals, she discovers the surprising 'pond rules', or rules of life, that creatures live by. The animated tale features the voices of American actors Piper Curda as animal-loving protagonist Mabel and Jon Hamm as the mayor trying to destroy the animals' habitat. The film's writer-director Daniel Chong, whose parents migrated from Singapore to the United States before he was born, says the 'pond rules' taught to him by his Singaporean parents shaped his childhood in the US. Due to open in Singapore cinemas on March 5, 2026, Hoppers is the big-screen feature debut of Chong, a Chinese-American animator known for creating the beloved Cartoon Network series We Bare Bears (2015 to 2019) and its spin-off, We Bare Bears: The Movie (2020). Chong, 46, was born in North Dakota and grew up in southern California, where he still lives today. Speaking to The Straits Times over Zoom, he says his immigrant parents' Singaporean values 'almost certainly' rubbed off on him as a child. His father, who worked as an engineer before becoming a professor of business management, and his mother, a stay-at-home parent who later worked as a nurse, were both 'very strict with me and understandably so', Chong recalls. And like many first-generation Asian immigrants in the US, they did not understand their son's dream of becoming an artist. 'They didn't quite know what it meant to have an art career, although that was something I kind of wanted pretty young,' says the film-maker, who attended the prestigious California Institute of the Arts and worked as a storyboard artist on animated hits such as Inside Out (2015) and Cars 2 (2011). 'So, I would say, if they had 'pond rules', it was definitely, like, 'Focus on studies, make sure you play your piano and do all the prerequisites before you do the fun stuff like drawing.' 'And as long as I did that – as, I think, most Asian parents would demand – I was okay,' Chong says. The animator's Singapore connection has also inspired his work on at least one occasion. 'The one time we did a shout-out for Singapore was after I had visited there doing some press for We Bare Bears. They took me to see the Merlion, which I know is probably the most cliched thing in Singapore, but we actually put that in an episode,' he says of the animated sitcom, which follows three adoptive brothers – a panda, grizzly and polar bear – as they navigate human society. Praised for its understated humour and charm, the show – based on Chong's 2010 webcomic The Three Bare Bears – went on to win an Annie award for Best Animated Television Production for Children and pick up an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Short Form Animated Programme. Released in July 2025, the first trailer for Hoppers hints at another charming and unique story about animals, which Chong says he has always been drawn to. 'I've always loved animals. I love drawing them, and that was really my entry point to art. I had this encyclopaedia of animals as a kid, and every day, I would open it up and just copy pictures from it.' In Hoppers, he wants to tell 'a story about humans' relationship with animals – and what animals think about us, which is a big mystery'. Animal-loving scientist Mabel (left, voiced by Piper Curda) lets her mind "hop" into the body of a lifelike robotic beaver in the Pixar film Hoppers. PHOTO: PIXAR While developing the movie, he also learnt beavers are 'incredible animals – a keystone species that creates an ecosystem for a whole array of other animals'. In 2024, an article in entertainment magazine The Hollywood Reporter quoted an unnamed former Pixar artist who claimed the animation studio's bosses had forced the Hoppers team to 'downplay its planned message of environmentalism'. But Chong, who reportedly began working on Hoppers at the end of 2020, says 'that's not entirely true'. 'All movies here go through so many changes, and this movie just changed a lot over the time period that we made it, because it's hard to be articulate right away with how you want to frame it. 'But we were very aligned with the studio and with (parent company) Disney about what this movie was about, and they never questioned it,' he adds. 'I'm very happy with how the movie came out and nothing got toned down, nor were we ever told to.' Hoppers opens in Singapore cinemas on March 5, 2026.

Animated sitcom South Park finds new relevance skewering the Trump era
Animated sitcom South Park finds new relevance skewering the Trump era

Straits Times

timea day ago

  • Straits Times

Animated sitcom South Park finds new relevance skewering the Trump era

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox A scene from the second episode of the 27th season of South Park featuring (from left) US President Donald Trump and US Vice-President J.D. Vance. NEW YORK – When the 27th season of South Park premiered in July with a scene showing US President Donald Trump in bed with Satan discussing American financier and child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, the White House attacked the animated sitcom as a 'fourth-rate show' and said it 'hasn't been relevant for over 20 years'. But the episode drew strong ratings, and when the series returned on Aug 6 with its second episode, some of the Trump administration officials and allies who were skewered – including US Vice-President J.D. Vance – took a different tack and tried to show they could take a joke. 'Well, I've finally made it,' Mr Vance wrote on social media as he reposted a scene from the show that imagined Mar-a-Lago as Fantasy Island (1977 to 1984) and the vice-president as Tattoo, the short sidekick who was played by French actor Herve Villechaize in the original TV series. Not all of the officials who were roasted laughed it off. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem was portrayed as a serial dog shooter who was obsessed with her appearance. (She wrote in her 2024 memoir about killing her dog with a gun.) Speaking on conservative talk show The Glenn Beck Program on Aug 7, she said it was 'lazy' to make fun of women for how they look. 'Only the liberals and the extremists do that,' she added. 'If they wanted to criticise my job, go ahead and do that. But clearly they can't. They just pick something petty like that.' In the South Park episode, Got A Nut, Mackey, a school counsellor, loses his job because of budget cuts and takes a position with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). He accompanies ICE on raids of a Dora The Explorer Live! show and of heaven, where he is told to round up only brown angels. South Park, which has routinely roasted political figures with satire and dark comedy since its debut in 1997, has regained momentum, as its tart observations of the second Trump administration are commanding attention and breaking through online. Before the episode aired, the Department of Homeland Security's account on social platform X shared a screenshot from a South Park trailer showing masked ICE agents – and added a link to its recruitment website. The South Park social media account responded, 'Wait, so we ARE relevant?' and added a ribald hashtag. The second episode also briefly portrays Mr Charlie Kirk, the founder and chief of the pro-Trump, youth-focused non-profit organisation Turning Point USA. The man himself embraced the parody and approvingly shared several clips on his social media accounts, including a segment in which Cartman fiercely debates 'woke liberal students'. 'Not bad, Cartman,' Mr Kirk wrote on X, where he changed his avatar to an image of Cartman sporting a Kirk-like haircut. NYTIMES

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store