Flight attendants appear in films, television and printed works. This is a list of some appearances.
1932-1950's: Ann of the Airlanes was a syndicated American radio adventure drama series focused on Ann Burton, an aspiring airplane hostess portrayed by Lynne Howard (possibly a stage name for Hollywood native Elia Braca).
1940: Flight Angels portrays stewardess training at an airline, and showcases the relationship between various members of flight crew.
1947: The Vicki Barr Flight Stewardess Series book series, in which Vicki's career "brings her glamorous friends, exciting adventures, loyal roommates and dates with a handsome young pilot and an up-and-coming reporter", sells well in the US.
1950: In Batman #62 (December/January), it is revealed that Catwoman is an amnesiac flight attendant who had turned to crime after suffering a prior blow to the head during a plane crash she survived. The name of the airline she worked for was Speed Airlines.
1951: Three Guys Named Mike is a film about flight attendant Marcy (Jane Wyman) who has to choose between three admirers and becomes an advertising icon.
1955: Out of the Clouds, British drama film directed by Basil Dearden, and starring Anthony Steel, Robert Beatty and James Robertson Justice. An Ealing Studios production, the film is composed of small stories dealing with the passengers and crew on a day at London Airport (the name of Heathrow Airport 1946–1966).
1956: Julie, starring Doris Day featured a flight attendant piloting a plane to safety.
1965: Boeing Boeing, based on a popular play, stars Tony Curtis as an American journalist in Paris who is simultaneously engaged to three different flight attendants.
1965: Mickey Rooney has a major role as a purser in the movie 24 Hours to Kill. It was filmed in Lebanon using a Comet jetliner.
1967: memoir Coffee, Tea or Me?, by Trudy Baker and Rachel Jones recounts the romantic adventures of two flight attendants.
1978-1979: Flying High, short-lived comedy-drama TV series starring Connie Sellecca about the lives of three attractive flight attendants.
1985: "Waitress in the Sky", a derisive song about a stewardess, appeared on the critically praised album Tim by The Replacements.
1986: Air Hostess (TV series), an Indian television show about the life of a flight attendant.
1990: "Die Hard 2", flights attendants on multiple flights are seen; one of the flights crashes into the runway presumably killing all on board.
1992: American film, Passenger 57, features many flight attendants on board a commercial flight that also transports a criminal.
1996: Australian comedian Caroline Reid creates the character "Pam Ann" to satirise the stereotypical aspects of the job of the female flight attendant.
2008: Happy Flight, which is about a copilot and flight attendant on an ANA flight to Hawaii.[3]
2010: Fly Girls (TV series), an American reality television series that follows the personal lives of five flight attendants working for Virgin America.
2011-2012: Pan Am, TV series period-piece drama set in 1963-1964 about the lives of Pan American World Airways stewardesses starring Christina Ricci and Margot Robbie.
2019: Uyare, the story of a young woman whose dreams of becoming a pilot are ended by an acid attack by a jealous boyfriend, but who recovers to be a flight attendant and heroine.
2022: Novelist Ann Hood wrote Fly Girl: A Memoir an autobiographical book about her experiences as a flight attendant.
A common trope in aviation disaster films is a flight attendant having to fly, and sometimes land, an airliner, after the pilots are killed or incapacitated. Such films include: