Tom Hanks appears as host of the first 11 episodes, introducing each from in front of a huge
relief sculpture of
the Greek god Apollo. This format is not used for the final episode, "Le Voyage dans la Lune", in which Hanks appears in character as Jean-Luc Despont, assistant to French filmmaker
Georges Méliès.[1][2]
Lane Smith portrays Emmett Seaborn, a fictional news reporter for a fictitious television network. Seaborn appears in 6 episodes, covering America's space program from the earliest days through the flight of
Apollo 13. He also appears in the final episode, reporting on the final
Apollo 17 lunar mission, and is himself an interview subject in a mock documentary. The fictional character was added to provide a sense of continuity to the series, often serving as a
Greek chorus. Seaborn's personality is similar in some respects to
Walter Cronkite, though the real Cronkite is mentioned at times and seen in archive footage. The use of a fictional character also allows for dramatic conflict to be created more easily in episode 8, "We Interrupt This Program," with another fictional reporter.[3]
Clint Howard as fictional flight controller Paul Lucas in episode 5, "Spider," and episode 8, "We Interrupt This Program".
Jay Mohr as Brett Hutchins, a fictional young television reporter who competes for Emmett Seaborn's job in episode 8.
Ted Levine as
Alan Shepard, one of the original
Mercury Seven astronauts. America's first astronaut to fly in episode 1 "Can We Do This?", and commander of the
Apollo 14 Moon landing mission in episode 9 "For Miles and Miles".
Mark Rolston as
Gus Grissom, Mercury and Gemini veteran who commands the ill-fated
Apollo 1 in episode 2 "Apollo One", killed along with Ed White and Roger Chaffee, also seen at
CAPCOM station, during White's EVA on
Gemini 4 in episode 1.
Mark Harmon as
Wally Schirra, Mercury and Gemini veteran who commands
Apollo 7 in episode 3, "We Have Cleared the Tower", originally backup commander of Apollo 1.[1]
Robert C. Treveiler as
Gordon Cooper, Mercury and Gemini veteran seen at CAPCOM during Gemini 4 in episode 11, "The Original Wives' Club", and in TV interview during episode 9.
Nick Searcy as
Deke Slayton, grounded
Project Mercury astronaut who becomes Director of Flight Operations, responsible for supervising the astronauts and determining the flight rotation, appears in all the episodes except "The Original Wives' Club".[4]
David Andrews as
Frank Borman, commands his first flight on the
Gemini 7 14-day endurance mission, and also commands the first flight to the Moon on
Apollo 8 in episode 4, "1968". He also serves on the investigation board of the
Apollo 1 fire in episode 2, "Apollo One", and appears in episode 11, "The Original Wives' Club".
Peter Scolari portrays
Pete Conrad in episode 1 as he joins NASA in 1962 in the second group of astronauts, intended to fly in
Project Gemini.
Paul McCrane is cast as Conrad in episode 7 "That's All There Is", as commander of the second lunar landing mission,
Apollo 12.
Tim Daly as
Jim Lovell, who flies with Borman on Gemini 7 and commands
Gemini 12 in episode 1, flies with Borman again on
Apollo 8 in episode 4, commands
Apollo 13 (off-screen) in episode 8, "We Interrupt This Broadcast", and appears in episode 11.[1]
Conor O'Farrell as
James McDivitt, commander of
Gemini 4 in episode 1, and commander of
Apollo 9 in episode 5, "Spider". Later seen as Manager of the Apollo Spacecraft Program in episode 8, and heard briefly in radio broadcast during Gemini 4 in episode 11
Steve Zahn as
Elliot See, scheduled to command
Gemini 9 but killed in a plane crash before the flight in episode 1.
Steve Hofvendahl as
Thomas P. Stafford, flew on
Gemini 6A, and commanded
Gemini 9A (both off-screen), seen briefly as commander of
Apollo 10 in episode 5. Also backup commander of
Apollo 7 in episode 3, and originally slated to fly with Alan Shepard on first crewed flight of Project Gemini, before Shepard`s grounding in episode 9. Also seen during astronaut briefing in episode 1.
Chris Isaak as
Ed White, America's first astronaut to walk in space on
Gemini 4 in episode 1, later killed in a fire preparing for
Apollo 1 in episode 2.
John Posey as
John Young, who flew two Gemini missions and on
Apollo 10 (all off-screen), and commands the
Apollo 16 lunar landing mission in episode 11. Also backup crew member of
Apollo 7 in episode 3. Also seen arrival of astronaut group, and later astronaut briefing, in episode 1.
Daniel Hugh Kelly as
Eugene Cernan, Gemini veteran and lunar module pilot of
Apollo 10 in episode 5, backup commander of Apollo 14 in episode 9, and commander of
Apollo 17 in episode 12, "Le Voyage dans la Lune". Also seen during astronaut briefing in episode 1.
Ben Marley as
Roger B. Chaffee, assigned to fly his first mission on Apollo 1 in episode 1, killed in accidental fire along with Grissom and White in episode 2. Seen briefly in episode 7, "That's All There Is".
John Mese as
Donn F. Eisele, Apollo 7 crew member in episode 3. Mentioned as being originally intended for Apollo 1 crew before being dropped due to shoulder injury.
Tom Verica as
Richard F. Gordon Jr., Gemini veteran and Command Module pilot on Apollo 12 in episode 7, backup commander of Apollo 15 in episode 10. Seen during astronaut briefing in episode 1.
Jim Leavy as
C.C. Williams, originally intended for assignment on Pete Conrad's lunar landing crew (what would become Apollo 12), before being killed in a plane crash and replaced with Alan Bean, in episode 7. Also seen during astronaut briefing in episode 1.
Tom Amandes as
Harrison "Jack" Schmitt, a geologist-astronaut from 1965's
Astronaut Group 4 responsible for improving the method of training the lunar explorers as part of Apollo 15 backup crew in episode 10. He flies as Lunar Module pilot on the last lunar mission,
Apollo 17 in episode 12.
Geoffrey Nauffts as
Ed Gibson, serving as CAPCOM during Apollo 12 in episode 7. Nauffts’ character is a composite character of Gibson and
Gerald Carr (astronaut).
J. Downing as
Charles Duke, part of 1966's
Astronaut Group 5, CAPCOM during Apollo 11 landing in episode 6, Lunar Module pilot on
Apollo 16 in episode 10.
Reed Birney as
John Houbolt, the NASA Langley engineer who fought to persuade NASA management that a separate spacecraft (the Lunar Module) was the easiest way to achieve a crewed lunar landing.
Joe Spano as
George Mueller, Associate Administrator of the Office of Manned Space Flight from September 1963 until December 1969; appears in episode 2.
Alan Ruck as
Tom Dolan, an engineer at Chance Vought Industries who made the Moon-rendezvous report that landed at Houbolts desk.
Isa Totah as
Farouk El-Baz, a lunar geologist who trains Apollo 15 Command Module Pilot Al Worden to recognize lunar surface features from orbit in episode 10.
Matt Craven as
Tom Kelly,
Grumman engineer responsible for managing the design and construction of the Lunar Module.
David Clennon as geology professor
Lee Silver, who trains the Apollo 15-17 landing crews to recognize important lunar material to collect, in episodes 10 and 12.
Günter Wendt appears in the background, sitting to Wally Schirra's (Mark Harmon) left, as an anonymous flight controller observing a contentious review and discussion of the Apollo 7 flight plan, along with Deke Slayton (Nick Searcy), John P Healey (Brandon Smith) and several other anonymous NASA personnel, in Episode 3 "We Have Cleared the Tower".[7]
^Wendt was not a NASA employee; though he worked at the Florida launch facilities, he was employed by
McDonnell Aircraft during the Mercury and Gemini programs, and by
North American Rockwell for the Apollo program. Wendt was not Pad Leader at the time of the Apollo 1 fire; Wally Schirra insisted on North American hiring him so he could be the Apollo Pad Leader.
^"Guenter Wendt". Apollo Lunar Surface Journal. Retrieved July 27, 2019 – via NASA.
References
Farmer, Gene; Dora Jane Hamblin (1970). First On the Moon: A Voyage With Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins and Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr. Boston: Little, Brown and Co. pp. 51–54.
Bibcode:
1970fomv.book.....F. Library of Congress 76-103950.
Tom Hanks appears as host of the first 11 episodes, introducing each from in front of a huge
relief sculpture of
the Greek god Apollo. This format is not used for the final episode, "Le Voyage dans la Lune", in which Hanks appears in character as Jean-Luc Despont, assistant to French filmmaker
Georges Méliès.[1][2]
Lane Smith portrays Emmett Seaborn, a fictional news reporter for a fictitious television network. Seaborn appears in 6 episodes, covering America's space program from the earliest days through the flight of
Apollo 13. He also appears in the final episode, reporting on the final
Apollo 17 lunar mission, and is himself an interview subject in a mock documentary. The fictional character was added to provide a sense of continuity to the series, often serving as a
Greek chorus. Seaborn's personality is similar in some respects to
Walter Cronkite, though the real Cronkite is mentioned at times and seen in archive footage. The use of a fictional character also allows for dramatic conflict to be created more easily in episode 8, "We Interrupt This Program," with another fictional reporter.[3]
Clint Howard as fictional flight controller Paul Lucas in episode 5, "Spider," and episode 8, "We Interrupt This Program".
Jay Mohr as Brett Hutchins, a fictional young television reporter who competes for Emmett Seaborn's job in episode 8.
Ted Levine as
Alan Shepard, one of the original
Mercury Seven astronauts. America's first astronaut to fly in episode 1 "Can We Do This?", and commander of the
Apollo 14 Moon landing mission in episode 9 "For Miles and Miles".
Mark Rolston as
Gus Grissom, Mercury and Gemini veteran who commands the ill-fated
Apollo 1 in episode 2 "Apollo One", killed along with Ed White and Roger Chaffee, also seen at
CAPCOM station, during White's EVA on
Gemini 4 in episode 1.
Mark Harmon as
Wally Schirra, Mercury and Gemini veteran who commands
Apollo 7 in episode 3, "We Have Cleared the Tower", originally backup commander of Apollo 1.[1]
Robert C. Treveiler as
Gordon Cooper, Mercury and Gemini veteran seen at CAPCOM during Gemini 4 in episode 11, "The Original Wives' Club", and in TV interview during episode 9.
Nick Searcy as
Deke Slayton, grounded
Project Mercury astronaut who becomes Director of Flight Operations, responsible for supervising the astronauts and determining the flight rotation, appears in all the episodes except "The Original Wives' Club".[4]
David Andrews as
Frank Borman, commands his first flight on the
Gemini 7 14-day endurance mission, and also commands the first flight to the Moon on
Apollo 8 in episode 4, "1968". He also serves on the investigation board of the
Apollo 1 fire in episode 2, "Apollo One", and appears in episode 11, "The Original Wives' Club".
Peter Scolari portrays
Pete Conrad in episode 1 as he joins NASA in 1962 in the second group of astronauts, intended to fly in
Project Gemini.
Paul McCrane is cast as Conrad in episode 7 "That's All There Is", as commander of the second lunar landing mission,
Apollo 12.
Tim Daly as
Jim Lovell, who flies with Borman on Gemini 7 and commands
Gemini 12 in episode 1, flies with Borman again on
Apollo 8 in episode 4, commands
Apollo 13 (off-screen) in episode 8, "We Interrupt This Broadcast", and appears in episode 11.[1]
Conor O'Farrell as
James McDivitt, commander of
Gemini 4 in episode 1, and commander of
Apollo 9 in episode 5, "Spider". Later seen as Manager of the Apollo Spacecraft Program in episode 8, and heard briefly in radio broadcast during Gemini 4 in episode 11
Steve Zahn as
Elliot See, scheduled to command
Gemini 9 but killed in a plane crash before the flight in episode 1.
Steve Hofvendahl as
Thomas P. Stafford, flew on
Gemini 6A, and commanded
Gemini 9A (both off-screen), seen briefly as commander of
Apollo 10 in episode 5. Also backup commander of
Apollo 7 in episode 3, and originally slated to fly with Alan Shepard on first crewed flight of Project Gemini, before Shepard`s grounding in episode 9. Also seen during astronaut briefing in episode 1.
Chris Isaak as
Ed White, America's first astronaut to walk in space on
Gemini 4 in episode 1, later killed in a fire preparing for
Apollo 1 in episode 2.
John Posey as
John Young, who flew two Gemini missions and on
Apollo 10 (all off-screen), and commands the
Apollo 16 lunar landing mission in episode 11. Also backup crew member of
Apollo 7 in episode 3. Also seen arrival of astronaut group, and later astronaut briefing, in episode 1.
Daniel Hugh Kelly as
Eugene Cernan, Gemini veteran and lunar module pilot of
Apollo 10 in episode 5, backup commander of Apollo 14 in episode 9, and commander of
Apollo 17 in episode 12, "Le Voyage dans la Lune". Also seen during astronaut briefing in episode 1.
Ben Marley as
Roger B. Chaffee, assigned to fly his first mission on Apollo 1 in episode 1, killed in accidental fire along with Grissom and White in episode 2. Seen briefly in episode 7, "That's All There Is".
John Mese as
Donn F. Eisele, Apollo 7 crew member in episode 3. Mentioned as being originally intended for Apollo 1 crew before being dropped due to shoulder injury.
Tom Verica as
Richard F. Gordon Jr., Gemini veteran and Command Module pilot on Apollo 12 in episode 7, backup commander of Apollo 15 in episode 10. Seen during astronaut briefing in episode 1.
Jim Leavy as
C.C. Williams, originally intended for assignment on Pete Conrad's lunar landing crew (what would become Apollo 12), before being killed in a plane crash and replaced with Alan Bean, in episode 7. Also seen during astronaut briefing in episode 1.
Tom Amandes as
Harrison "Jack" Schmitt, a geologist-astronaut from 1965's
Astronaut Group 4 responsible for improving the method of training the lunar explorers as part of Apollo 15 backup crew in episode 10. He flies as Lunar Module pilot on the last lunar mission,
Apollo 17 in episode 12.
Geoffrey Nauffts as
Ed Gibson, serving as CAPCOM during Apollo 12 in episode 7. Nauffts’ character is a composite character of Gibson and
Gerald Carr (astronaut).
J. Downing as
Charles Duke, part of 1966's
Astronaut Group 5, CAPCOM during Apollo 11 landing in episode 6, Lunar Module pilot on
Apollo 16 in episode 10.
Reed Birney as
John Houbolt, the NASA Langley engineer who fought to persuade NASA management that a separate spacecraft (the Lunar Module) was the easiest way to achieve a crewed lunar landing.
Joe Spano as
George Mueller, Associate Administrator of the Office of Manned Space Flight from September 1963 until December 1969; appears in episode 2.
Alan Ruck as
Tom Dolan, an engineer at Chance Vought Industries who made the Moon-rendezvous report that landed at Houbolts desk.
Isa Totah as
Farouk El-Baz, a lunar geologist who trains Apollo 15 Command Module Pilot Al Worden to recognize lunar surface features from orbit in episode 10.
Matt Craven as
Tom Kelly,
Grumman engineer responsible for managing the design and construction of the Lunar Module.
David Clennon as geology professor
Lee Silver, who trains the Apollo 15-17 landing crews to recognize important lunar material to collect, in episodes 10 and 12.
Günter Wendt appears in the background, sitting to Wally Schirra's (Mark Harmon) left, as an anonymous flight controller observing a contentious review and discussion of the Apollo 7 flight plan, along with Deke Slayton (Nick Searcy), John P Healey (Brandon Smith) and several other anonymous NASA personnel, in Episode 3 "We Have Cleared the Tower".[7]
^Wendt was not a NASA employee; though he worked at the Florida launch facilities, he was employed by
McDonnell Aircraft during the Mercury and Gemini programs, and by
North American Rockwell for the Apollo program. Wendt was not Pad Leader at the time of the Apollo 1 fire; Wally Schirra insisted on North American hiring him so he could be the Apollo Pad Leader.
^"Guenter Wendt". Apollo Lunar Surface Journal. Retrieved July 27, 2019 – via NASA.
References
Farmer, Gene; Dora Jane Hamblin (1970). First On the Moon: A Voyage With Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins and Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr. Boston: Little, Brown and Co. pp. 51–54.
Bibcode:
1970fomv.book.....F. Library of Congress 76-103950.