Pioneering pilot Wally Funk flew to space at age 82 on 1st crewed Blue Origin flight

She was previously told, "Wally, you're a girl, you can't do that."

The flight fulfilled a lifelong dream for Funk, 82, and made her the oldest person ever to fly to space.

Funk's dreams of becoming an astronaut date back to the original U.S.-Soviet Space Race era, when she was the youngest graduate of the privately funded Woman in Space Program that later became known as the "Mercury 13" due to its 13 women participants. Female pilots went through the same physiological and psychological tests as the astronauts selected by NASA for Project Mercury. The women, however, never ended up flying to space.

In an Instagram video shared by Bezos revealing the news Thursday, Funk said she already knows the first thing she will say upon landing back on Earth: "Honey, that was the best thing that ever happened to me!"

"Back in the 60s, I was in the Mercury 13 program. They asked me, 'Do you want to be an astronaut?' I said, 'Yes,'" Funk said in the video. "They told me that I had done better and completed the work faster than any of the guys. So, I got a hold of NASA -- four times -- I said, 'I want to become an astronaut,' but nobody would take me."

"I didn't think that I would ever get to go up," she added. "They said, 'Wally, you're a girl, you can't do that!' I said, 'Guess what, doesn't matter what you are, you can still do it if you want to do it, and I like to do things that nobody has ever done.'"

Despite not becoming a NASA astronaut, Funk still blazed trails for women in flight. She was the first female Federal Aviation Administration inspector and later the first woman National Transportation Safety Board investigator. She has amassed some 19,600 flying hours and taught more than 3,000 people how to fly.

The crew for the New Shepard spacecraft's first flight consisted of Jeff Bezos, Mark Bezos (Jeff's brother), Funk, and 18-year-old Oliver Daemen, who became the youngest person to fly into space, after an unnamed would-be passenger dropped out of the mission after paying $28 million for a seat.

The inaugural crewed flight for Blue Origin lifted off on July 20 landing successfully while the capsule carrying the crew crossed the Karman line -- the boundary between Earth’s atmosphere and space.