Who
calls the tunes in space? Brad Pitt asks NASA astronaut
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[September 17, 2019]
By Joey Roulette
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Brad
Pitt traded laughs on Monday in a call to the
International Space Station with a NASA astronaut, who
somersaulted during the zero-gravity interview ahead of
this week's release of the actor's new film, the space
thriller "Ad Astra."
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Pitt peppered astronaut Nick Hague with dozens of questions
about what life was like in space. He interviewed Hague from
Washington via a transmission line from NASA's Mission Control
Center in Houston.
“Most important question: Who controls the jam box?” Pitt asked,
referring to the space station's music.
“We have a rotating playlist, we take turns. And it’s nice
because we have the international flair as well,” Hague replied.
“Getting to hear some traditional music from Russia over dinner
is a nice change, exposure.”
Pitt plays astronaut Roy McBride, who travels to the outer edges
of the solar system to find his missing father, confronting a
mystery along the way that threatens humanity’s existence back
on Earth. "Ad Astra" - whose Latin title means "to the stars" -
opens in U.S. theaters on Friday. The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration was given an early copy of the movie's
script to provide visual and technical expertise, according to
its film and TV liaison, Bert Ulrich. Detailed images of Mars
from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory informed the film’s
recreation of Martian landscapes, he said. “The script did not
have a NASA storyline, but there were ways that we could still
help them,” Ulrich said in an interview, adding that the film
shows some parallels to NASA’s Moon-to-Mars Artemis program,
such as the way characters use the moon to travel further to
Mars.
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After asking questions like how realistic his zero-gravity movements
were in a studio environment - as Hague performed one for him - Pitt
said he had one last question "and I need to call on your
expertise."
"Who was more believable, Clooney or Pitt?” the actor asked,
referring to George Clooney, a good friend who played an astronaut
in the 2013 film "Gravity" and has starred with Pitt in a number of
other films.
“You were, absolutely,” Hague replied.
(This story corrects paragraph two to indicate Pitt interviewed
astronaut from Washington, not Houston; Fixes dateline)
(Reporting by Joey Roulette; Writing by Bill Tarrant; Editing by
Jonathan Oatis and Dan Grebler)
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