What Katy Perry and More Stars Have Said About Going to Space

Olivia Munn isn’t fangirling over the upcoming Blue Origin launch, but here’s what Cameron Diaz, Charlize Theron and more have said about space travel and going where not very many have gone before.

Count Olivia Munn among those who are not over the moon about the upcoming star-studded Blue Origin space flight.

“What are you guys gonna do up in space? What are you doing up there?” the Your Friends & Neighbors star said April 3 while cohosting Today With Jenna & Friends. “I know this is probably obnoxious, but, like, it’s so much money to go to space, and there’s a lot of people who can’t even afford eggs.”

Well, you know, that’s just, like, your opinion, Munn.

There are celebrities who have been more supportive of the venture that will see Jeff Bezos‘ fiancée (and licensed pilot) Lauren Sánchez rocket into space with Katy Perry, Gayle King, aerospace engineer Aisha Bowe, civil rights activist Amanda Nguyen, and film producer Kerianne Flynn.

“First of all, Gayle, do not unbuckle until they say you can unbuckle,” Apollo 13 star and From the Earth to the Moon host Tom Hanks said in a video message for King played during CBS Mornings April 9. “Get over to a window as soon as possible. And linger there as long as possible.”

And Drew Barrymore was excited to hear all about it once King had returned to Earth, offering, “Best of luck, can’t wait to pick your brain as soon as you get home. Bye!”

On Instagram, Viola Davis and Jessica Seinfeld “liked” an Elle cover featuring the six-woman crew (the first all-female spaceflight crew since 1963, according to Blue Origin), while Scooter Braun threw up worship hands and jewelry designer Jen Meyer called the venture “incredible.”

And it’s not as if Munn isn’t for space travel in general. But she was unclear on what sort of step this trip—which is expected to last for about 11 minutes and reach 65 miles above Earth—will be for man or womankind, wondering, “What are they gonna do up there that has made it better for us down here?”

But she’s not the only one who has had a take on boldly going where relatively few have gone before.

From Lance Bass (who almost went) and William Shatner (who did go) to Cameron Diaz, Kim Kardashian and Prince William (hard pass), find out what these stars have said about going to space:

Gayle King

“I don’t know how to explain being terrified and excited at the same time,” Gayle King said on CBS Mornings in February when she was announced as a member of Blue Origin’s six-woman New Shepard NS-31 crew scheduled to blast off April 14. “It’s like how I felt about to deliver a baby.”

The idea was “to open myself up to new adventures and step outside of my comfort zone,” said the 70-year-old cohost, who consulted ground control—i.e. her sons and BFF Oprah Winfrey—before signing up for the mission.

“Once Kirby and Will and Oprah was fine with it, I was fine,” King added. “I thought Oprah would say ‘no,’ no. She said, ‘I think if you don’t do it, when they all come back and you had the opportunity to do it, you will be kicking yourself.’ She’s right.”

Katy Perry

“I was like, ‘What am I going to wear?’” Katy Perry told Elle ahead of her Blue Origin flight with King, Lauren Sánchez, Aisha Bowe, Amanda Nguyen, and Kerianne Flynn. “But seriously, I have wanted to go to space for almost 20 years. I was investigating all of the possible commercial options. Even when Blue Origin was first talking about commercial travel to space, I was like, ‘Sign me up! I’m first in line.’”

MTV News did report in 2010 that Perry had purchased a $200,000 ticket to board a Virgin Galactic suborbital flight, when the company finally got one off the ground.

“I’m so into extraterrestrial stuff,” the “E.T.” singer told the outlet around that time. “It’s very difficult for me to look up into the sky in the middle of the night and not think that our planet is one of…a bajillion. It’s really, really small. And Russell and I are interested in anything extraterrestrial. I mean, we’re going to space.” (She and then-husband Russell Brand split up in 2011.)

As her 2025 Blue Origin trip approached, the 40-year-old told Elle, “I don’t have any time to be nervous; I ain’t got time to be worried. I’m going to feel something when they go, ‘10, 9, 8, 7,…’ but until then we’ve got stuff to do. We’ve got business to handle.”

But best of all, Perry quipped, “Space is going to finally be glam. Let me tell you something. If I could take glam up with me, I would do that. We are going to put the ‘ass’ in astronaut.”

William Shatner

William Shatner was 90 when he went to space aboard a Blue Origin rocket in 2021. Once they were up there, the Star Trek alum hightailed it (as fast as floating in zero gravity would let him) to the window.

And Shatner saw “a cold, dark, black emptiness,” he memorably shared in his book (coauthored with Josh Brandon) Boldly Go: Reflections on a Life of Awe and Wonder upon his return. “It was unlike any blackness you can see or feel on Earth. It was deep, enveloping, all-encompassing. I turned back toward the light of home. I could see the curvature of Earth, the beige of the desert, the white of the clouds and the blue of the sky. It was life. Nurturing, sustaining, life. Mother Earth. Gaia. And I was leaving her.

“Everything I had thought was wrong. Everything I had expected to see was wrong.”

Which made Shatner appreciate Earth all the more. “It reinforced tenfold my own view on the power of our beautiful, mysterious collective human entanglement,” he wrote, “and eventually, it returned a feeling of hope to my heart.”

Wishing King luck ahead of her Blue Origin trip, Shatner said in a video message, “It’s an adventure of a lifetime. Something you never done before and you will never do again. Embrace the journey.”

Lance Bass

Lance Bass trained to go to space back in 2002, getting physically in sync with a Russian crew after Dutch-based space tourism company MirCorp arranged with a documentary crew to purchase a $20 million seat for the boy bander aboard a Soyuz flight to the International Space Station.

But there was an insurance issue a week before launch, and Bass didn’t get to go.

“If there’s no documentary, there’s no flight, so, very highly disappointed,” he reflected to Space.com in 2023, “but it was still amazing to be able to finish that training.”

The ‘NSYNC alum noted that he’d still love to go to the ISS one day, but he wasn’t interested in going up “for a few minutes” on a Blue Origin or Virgin Galactic suborbital flight.

Michael Strahan

Michael Strahan said going to space aboard Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket in December 2021 was “almost like an out-of-body experience.”

“It’s hard to believe it even happened,” he told his then-ABC News colleague Amy Robach at the time. “It’s a crazy feeling, like the feeling of weightlessness, the feeling when the booster goes off, the rocket goes off, and it detaches and you don’t know what’s up from down. And you’re body just goes like this, and you take off a seatbelt, but naturally, it feels natural to move.”

Kim Kardashian

Kim Kardashian’s then-boyfriend Pete Davidson said OK to an invitation to fly gratis alongside five paying customers on the New Shepard in March 2022, but after the flight was delayed, the Saturday Night Live star had to bow out.

“Pete Davidson is no longer able to join the NS-20 crew on this mission,” a Blue Origin spokesperson announced. “We will announce the sixth crew member in the coming days.”

When he was booked to go, however, Kardashian—who recalled seeing her parents cry in 1986 when the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded—admitted that she was initially freaked out.

Jeff Bezos invited Pete to go to space,” she said on The Kardashians. “I really can’t believe it—that he’s gonna go. It seems like such a crazy concept to me.”

Then she got to talk to Bezos, however, “and hearing how safe it is and all the testing and everything they do, I felt comfortable with [Pete] going.”

And, Kardashian added, “If I didn’t have four kids, I would absolutely go.”

Elon Musk

SpaceX founder Elon Musk hasn’t actually flown in one of his company’s crafts yet, but he did say at the International Astronautical Conference in 2016 he hoped they would be ferrying humans to Mars as soon as 2024. He admitted at the time that was an “optimistic” estimate.

Less optimistic, Musk also said at the time, “I think the first journeys to Mars will be really very dangerous. The risk of fatality will be high. There’s just no way around it.”

He adjusted his goal in September 2024, saying that SpaceX intended to launch an uncrewed Starship to Mars by the end of 2026, with an eye on sending humans to the Red Planet two years after that.

Leonardo DiCaprio

While moderating a discussion at the White House between then-President Barack Obama and climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe in October 2016, Leonardo DiCaprio maybe-joked that he was onboard with the whole Mars thing.

“The reality of it is, if you’re a human living on this planet—which most of us are, yeah?”  Hayhoe said as they discussed the importance of electing leaders who believe in climate change. “As long as we haven’t signed up for the trip to Mars. I don’t want to know if anyone has, I think you’re crazy.”

To which DiCaprio interjected, “I did.”

Quipped Obama, “I think he’ll acknowledge he’s crazy.”

While DiCaprio has never set the record straight on that one way or another, he once had plans to hitch a ride on a Virgin Galactic space liner. So much so that a seat on the same spacecraft, whenever it eventually took off, was auctioned off for $1.5 million at the amfAR Cinema Against AIDS charity gala—which DiCaprio was present for—during the 2013 Cannes Film Festival.

But as the years went by, Virgin Galactic founder Richard Branson said he was “not sure” whether DiCaprio would be on the first official flight or not.

“We’ve got about 700 people signed up and they’ve been pretty committed,” he told Vulture in 2016. “Some of them have been signed up for as long as ten years since we started the program. But we’re not too long now, I think.”

The VSS Unity eventually achieved the company’s first suborbital space flight in 2018, without DiCaprio aboard.

Justin Bieber

In February 2013, Justin Bieber tweeted, “I wanna do a concert in space.”

NASA replied, “Maybe we can help you  with that.”

That June, Branson tweeted that Bieber and his then-manager Scooter Braun had signed up for Virgin Galactic suborbital spaceflights, adding, “Congrats, see you there!”

To which Bieber replied, “Let’s shoot a music video in SPACE!!”

None of this has happened yet. 

Tom Hanks

Tom Hanks has been obsessed with space ever since he watched Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey in 1968, when he was 12.

“It presented this romantic notion of a human being in this place void of life,” the Apollo 13 star told The Guardian in 2023. “I had paid attention to the space program prior to that, but I was not hooked by the artistry or the romance of it until I saw that movie.”

A month after his mind-blowing cinematic experience, he watched a Christmas broadcast of Apollo 8 orbiting the moon. “I’m actually seeing the whole Earth on my TV,” he recalled. “I am on that planet that is in the picture!”

His latest space-centric project is The Moonwalkers: A Journey with Tom Hanks, an immersive film about the Apollo missions playing at Space Center Houston, which he cowrote and narrates.

And count Hanks among the stars reportedly on the Virgin Galactic standby list. Though the Oscar winner said on Jimmy Kimmel Live! in 2021 that he had turned down a Blue Origin flight opportunity for a very down-to-earth reason.

“It costs 28 million bucks or something like that,” Hanks cracked. “I’m doing good, Jimmy. I’m doing good, but I ain’t paying 28 [million] bucks.”

Ashton Kutcher

Ashton Kutcher also booked future passage with Virgin Galactic, but sold his ticket back after a heart-to-heart with Mila Kunis.

“When I got married and had kids,” he told Cheddar News in July 2021, “my wife basically encouraged that it was not a smart family decision to be heading into space when we have young children.”

Prince William

Prince William won’t be accused of trying to colonize Mars, thank you very much.

The world should be “fixed on trying to repair this planet,” he told the BBC’s Newscast in 2021. “That really is quite crucial, we need to be focusing on this [planet] rather than giving up and heading out into space to try and think of solutions for the future.”

And, the father of three noted, he admittedly preferred to measure altitude in feet, not miles.

“I have absolutely no interest in going that high,” William said. “I’m a pilot…but I stay reasonably close to the ground. I’ve been up to 65,000 feet once in a plane and that was truly terrifying.”

Cameron Diaz

I’d love to go to space—it really is the next frontier,” Cameron Diaz told InStyle in 2014. “Humans have to move off this planet at some point. We’re explorers—that’s what we do.”

Pondering a blue moon from a beach in St. Barts at the time, the actress added, “I don’t know anything. All I know is things are bigger than me. And I surrender to everything bigger than me, whatever those things might be.”

Michael Fassbender

Starring in Ridley Scott’s Alien prequel Prometheus didn’t turn Michael Fassbender off the idea of really going to space, even if no one can hear you scream out there.

“If I had a chance to go into space, I’d definitely take it,” he told W in 2012, “but it’s never been a priority for me.”

Charlize Theron

Fassbender’s Prometheus costar Charlize Theron, however, was a little haunted.

“If space is not the world of Ridley Scott, I’d go,” Theron told W. “When I watched Prometheus at a screening, I got so scared, I elbowed the metal chair next to me. I still have a little scar from it.” And considering she knew what was going to happen already, “That says a lot about how pathetic I am,” she continued. “I don’t think I’m made of the right stuff for space.”

Paris Hilton

After reports surfaced that Paris Hilton booked a passage on Virgin Galactic in 2008 (10 years before a flight took place), she said in an interview that she was actually quite scared.

“What if I don’t come back?” Hilton mused. “With the whole light-years thing, what if I come back 10,000 years later, and everyone I know is dead? I’ll be like, ‘Great. Now I have to start all over.’”

She never made the trip, but interviewing Branson on This Is Paris in 2021, she revealed that her now-husband Carter Reum had told her he bought a ticket to ride.

“Our aim is, one day, to try to enable many people who are listening to this program to go to space, and try to drive the price down,” Branson said. “But it will take time ‘cause, you know, space is expensive.”