Fifty years ago this week, on April 12, 1961, Soviet cosmonaut Yury Gagarin
blasted off into space, becoming an overnight star. Thereafter, the Kremlin
scripted most of what was written about him. Writer and filmmaker Jamie Doran,
in a new biography co-authored with Piers Bizony and titled Starman: The Truth
Behind The Legend Of Yuri Gagarin, explores the man behind the official
facade. Doran spoke to RFE/RL's chief Washington editor, Christian Caryl.
RFE/RL: Why is the world still so fascinated by Gagarin?
Jamie Doran: We're fascinated by space itself. We're very much
a fledgling species probably preparing in the next hundred years to start
properly going out to explore the cosmos. And he was the first. There's no way
of going back on that.
RFE/RL: What was the most compelling aspect, for you, about
Gagarin and his story?
JD: I think the most fascinating thing for me was to discover
what a real true human being Gagarin was - an absolutely lovely fellow who was
genuinely adored by almost everyone. We had great difficulty finding anyone who
was opposed to him - even right down to his greatest rival, German Titov [the
second human to orbit the Earth aboard Vostok 2 in August 1961]. He eventually
admitted to us that, you know, they were right to choose Yury, everyone loves
Yury. And that was the big difference between the two: Yury, son of a peasant
boy or peasant parents, and Titov, son of teachers.
RFE/RL: Are there any telling anecdotes that illustrate Gagarin's
character?
JD: I love the stories of time after time when he was supposed to
be one of the guests of honor at the Kremlin Palace, you know, at some of the
big banquets. And, of course, Yury would go missing. And eventually they knew
where to look. He would be out sharing a half bottle of vodka with some of the
young cadets freezing on a bus outside the Kremlin. They'd been providing the
guard of honor. And he'd just be chatting away to them. Those were his people.
Not the people in the fancy seats at the Kremlin banquets.
RFE/RL: Did Gagarin have any weaknesses?
JD: He had his foibles like any human being ... Drink followed by
womanizing, I guess. He had his moments in that area. There are the famous
times like one in Foros in the Crimea when his wife discovered him in a
difficult situation with one of the maids in the hotel they were staying in.
And, of course, Yury rushed to the window and jumped out, crashing two floors
down, battering his eye and cutting it very badly. And, of course, the usual
KGB nonsense afterwards was that Yury had fallen on the rocks while trying to
save his daughter who had slipped, when in fact he'd jumped out of the window
to avoid his wife.
RFE/RL: How did Gagarin cope with his sudden fame?
JD: He enjoyed the fame to begin with, but it became too much.
And, you know, the drink took over. He started getting involved in all kinds of
raucous behavior. But, you know, he eventually came out of that and went back
to working very, very hard, especially in designing aerodynamics for planes and
future space vehicles.
RFE/RL: What do we know about his political views?
JD: He wasn't a dissident or a rebel and appeared to genuinely
believe in the ideals of the system but nonetheless didn't fail to recognize
its failings. And I think there's one key factor here. When [Soviet leader
Nikita] Khrushchev was in power, Yury had direct access to the very top and was
able to genuinely work on behalf of ordinary people and even his colleagues to
try and change things, to try and better their lives.
But when Khruschchev was ousted and [Leonid] Brezhnev came to power, Brezhnev
did not like Yury; there's no doubt about that at all. There's the famous story
which has never quite been confirmed of Yury throwing champagne in Brezhnev's
face ... Certainly that that story existed is indicative of the kind of
relationship that they had.
RFE/RL: Why did so many conspiracies arise about Gagarin's death?
[On March 27, 1968, while on a training flight from Chkalovsky Air Base, he and
flight instructor Vladimir Seryogin died in a MiG-15UTI crash near the town of
Kirzhach. He was 34.]
JD: I come down on the side very much of people being very
frightened to get blamed for his death. And as a result of that, absolute
nonsense was being written in official documentation.
I remember Alexei Leonov, the first man to walk in space, saying that he'd seen
a report on Yury's death apparently penned by him - this was many years later -
and it wasn't his writing at all. Someone had actually written this report and
put Leonov's name and signature - which was not a very good copy, apparently -
at the bottom of the page. So I think everyone was very frightened.
In reality, I don't doubt for a single second, this was not murder. He was not
killed. I think the conspiracy theorists should go and look in another place. I
think it's nonsense to suggest that. What I would say is a lot of people were
running around trying to avoid taking the blame themselves.
RFE/RL: What is, to your mind, Gagarin's enduring significance?
JD: What I think is amazing about the Gagarin story is that he
is, I think probably, the one and only great Soviet hero who easily crossed
into the area of being a great Russian hero, as well. You don't see too many
figures of Soviet history being lauded by the Russians today. Gagarin was just
this one guy who was able to cross both eras ...
Even though you had nonsense propaganda written at the time, the one thing that
no one could avoid was that everyone loved this guy.
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