Shatner was one of four passengers to journey for 10 minutes
and 17 seconds to the edge of space aboard the white fully autonomous
60-foot-tall (18.3 meters-tall) New Shepard spacecraft, which took off from
Blue Origin's launch site about 20 miles (32km) outside the rural west Texas
town of Van Horn.
The crew capsule returned to the Texas desert from the
suborbital flight under parachutes, raising a cloud of dust. Shatner emerged
gingerly from the capsule in the desert silence, appearing reflective as the others
celebrated by cheering and popping champagne bottles.
Bezos was on hand and embraced Shatner, who was wearing a
cap and a blue flight suit with the company's name in white letters on one
sleeve.
"What you have given me is the most profound experience
I can imagine," Shatner told Bezos as the two chatted for several minutes.
"I am so filled with emotion about what just happened."
The all-civilian crew experienced a few minutes of
weightlessness, having traveled about 65.8 miles (106 km) above the Earth's
surface - higher than the internationally recognised boundary of space known as
the Karman Line, about 62 miles (100km) above Earth.
It marked the second space tourism flight for Blue Origin,
the company Bezos - the Amazon founder and current executive chairman - founded
two decades ago. Bezos flew aboard the first one in July.
Shatner - who embodied the promise of space travel in the
classic 1960s TV series Star Trek and seven subsequent films - said he had
prepared himself for experiencing weightlessness, but was stunned at the
dramatic contrast of the beauty of the blue Earth and the blackness of space.
"You're looking into blackness, into black
ugliness," Shatner said. "And you look down, there's the blue down
there - and the black up there - and it's just, there is Mother Earth."
"This is life and that's death, and in an instant, you
know - whoa - that's death," Shatner said. "That's what I saw."
"Is that the way death is?" Shatner asked.
Before the flight, each astronaut rang a bell and then
entered the capsule atop the rocketship, with Bezos closing the hatch. Winds
were light and skies were clear for the launch, conducted after two delays
totaling roughly 45 minutes.
Joining Shatner were former NASA engineer Chris Boshuizen,
clinical research entrepreneur Glen de Vries and Blue Origin vice president and
engineer Audrey Powers.
'Beam me up'
Shatner, who turned 90 in March, has been acting since the
1950s and remains busy with entertainment projects and fan conventions. He is
best known for starring as Captain James Tiberius Kirk of the starship
Enterprise on Star Trek.
During the opening credits of each episode of the series, he
called space "the final frontier" and promised "to explore
strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilisations, to boldly go
where no man has gone before."
"Beam me up," Shatner's character would tell the
Enterprise's chief engineer Scotty, played by James Doohan, in a memorable
catchphrase when he needed to be transported to the starship.
Shatner's participation helped generate publicity for Blue
Origin as it competes against two billionaire-backed rivals - Elon Musk's
SpaceX and Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic - to attract customers willing to
pay large sums to experience spaceflight.
The flight represented another important day for the nascent
space tourism industry that, according to UBS, could reach an annual value of
$3 billion in a decade.
Blue Origin had a successful debut space tourism flight on
July 20, with Bezos and three others aboard on a trip lasting 10 minutes and 10
seconds. On that flight, pioneering female aviator Wally Funk at age 82 became
the oldest person to reach space. The previous record was set in 1998 when
pioneering astronaut John Glenn returned to space as a 77-year-old US senator.
Branson inaugurated his space tourism service on July 11,
riding along on a suborbital flight with six others. SpaceX debuted its space
tourism business by flying the first all-civilian crew to reach Earth's orbit
in a three-day mission ending September 18.
In his annual address to world leaders last month, UN
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres criticised "billionaires joyriding to
space while millions go hungry on earth."
Asked about Shatner's flight, UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric
said on Wednesday that Guterres "very much continues to believe what he
said in the General Assembly." © Reuters
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