Katy Perry and her all-female crew are set to “shoot across the sky” like a firework and blast off into space on a Blue Origin rocket.
The E.T. singer, along with journalist Gayle King and billionaire Jeff Bezos’ fiancée, Lauren Sánchez, are preparing to blast off on Monday morning as part of Blue Origin’s latest space mission, called NS-31.
Former NASA rocket scientist Aisha Bowe, bioastronautics research scientist Amanda Nguyen and film producer Kerianne Flynn round out the all-female crew on the New Shepard rocket, a 59-foot-tall (18-metre) suborbital spacecraft. This marks the first all-female flight crew in more than six decades to head to space.
Bezos told Sánchez over the radio transmission that he wishes he was going up with her ahead of the flight.
“Most amazing, most profound experience. I’m so excited for you, I don’t wanna get off. I wanna go with you. When you get back I can’t wait to hear how it’s changed you. I love all of you. God speed,” he said.
The crew will experience a few minutes of microgravity before returning to Earth by parachute, landing in the West Texas desert at the company’s Launch Site One.
“I LOVE YOU,” Perry wrote on X ahead of the launch.
I LOVE YOU
— KATY PERRY (@katyperry) April 14, 2025
“I’m so excited for this launch. I have never felt this much love as I’m getting today,” Perry said in an Instagram video.
Today’s flight marks the 11th human flight for the rocket and its 31st overall. The last recorded all-female spaceflight was the 1963 solo mission of Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova, the first woman in space.
New Shepard has previously taken other notable names to space, including Star Trek actor William Shatner, former NFL player Michael Strahan and Bezos.
In the lead-up to the flight, Perry told The Associated Press about her interest in space ahead of the mission.
“I was listening to Cosmos by Carl Sagan and reading a book on string theory,” she recalled. “I’ve always been interested in astrophysics and interested in astronomy and astrology and the stars. We are all made of stardust and we all come from the stars.”
She also revealed how she was getting herself prepared to take the flight.
“I am talking to myself every day and going, ‘You’re brave, you’re bold, you are doing this for the next generation to inspire so many different people but especially young girls to go, I’ll go to space in the future. No limitations,’” she said.
Perry said she has been “psychologically” preparing for the spaceflight by reading the works.
“I’m really excited about the engineering of it all. I’m excited to learn more about STEM and just the math about what it takes to accomplish this type of thing,” she said.
Perry said that whenever she tries something new or daunting, she looks inward for strength and confidence.
“Using that feminine divine that I was born with and definitely unlocked when I had my daughter even more. It leveled up for sure. Being a mother just makes you level up with that type of power,” she said.
Bezos’ rocket company Blue Origin announced the crew in February. Sanchez, a helicopter pilot and former TV journalist, selected the women who would join her on a 10-minute spaceflight from West Texas.
“I am feeling so grateful and grounded and honoured to be invited and included with this incredible group of women,” Perry said. Whenever she gets nervous about the trip, she reminds herself how important it is.
Sánchez is said to have “brought the mission together” for the latest flight of the New Shepard rocket, named after Alan Shepard, the first American in space.
“She is honored to lead a team of explorers on a mission that will challenge their perspectives of Earth, empower them to share their own stories, and create lasting impact that will inspire generations to come,” according to a statement from Blue Origin.
Sánchez described the flight as “a life-changing experience for each of us.”
“Most importantly, I am looking forward to all the women in this crew sharing their story and inspiring future generations to dream big,” she added.