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Flight attendant

A flight attendant, traditionally known as a steward (MASC) or stewardess (FEM); or air host (MASC) or hostess (FEM), is a member of the aircrew aboard commercial flights, many business jets and some government aircraft.[1][2] Collectively called cabin crew, flight attendants are primarily responsible for passenger safety and comfort.

This article is about the occupation. Not to be confused with The Flight Attendant or The Flight Attendant (novel).

Pink () or Red (Airbus): interphone calls from the cockpit to a flight attendant and/or interphone calls between two flight attendants, the latter case if a green light is not present or being used for the same purpose (steady with high-low chime), or all services emergency call (flashing with repeated high-low chime). On some airlines Airbus' aircraft (such as Delta Air Lines), this light is accompanied by a high-medium-low chime to indicate a call to all flight attendant stations. The Boeing 787 uses a separate red light to indicate a sterile flight deck while using pink for interphone calls from the cockpit.

Boeing

Blue: call from passenger in seat (steady with single high chime).

Amber: call from passenger in lavatory (steady with single high chime), or lavatory smoke detector set off (flashing with repeated high chime).

Green: on some aircraft (some airlines Airbus aircraft, and the Boeing 787), this colour is used to indicate interphone calls between two flight attendants, distinguishing them from the pink or red light used for interphone calls made from the flight deck to a flight attendant, and is also accompanied with a high-low chime like the pink or red light. On the Boeing 787, a flashing green light with a repeated high-low chime is used to indicate a call to all flight attendant stations.

Qualifications[edit]

Training[edit]

Minimum entry requirements for a career as a flight attendant is usually the completion of the final year of high school; e.g. the International Baccalaureate. Many prospective attendants have a post-secondary school diploma in an area such as tourism and a number hold degrees having worked in other occupations, often as teachers. Graduates holding degrees, including those with studies in one or more foreign languages, communication studies, business studies, public relations or nursing can be favoured by employers.[33][34]


Flight attendants are normally trained in the hub or headquarters city of an airline over a period that may run from four weeks to six months, depending on the country and airline. The main focus of training is safety, and attendants are evaluated for each type of aircraft in which they work. One of the most elaborate training facilities was Breech Academy, which Trans World Airlines (TWA) opened in 1969 in Overland Park, Kansas. Other airlines also sent their attendants to the school. However, during the fare wars, the school's viability declined and it closed around 1988.


Safety training includes, but is not limited to: emergency passenger evacuation management, use of evacuation slides/life rafts, in-flight firefighting, first aid, CPR, defibrillation, ditching/emergency landing procedures, decompression emergencies, crew resource management, and security.


In the United States, the Federal Aviation Administration requires flight attendants on aircraft with 20 or more seats and used by an air carrier for transportation to hold a Certificate of Demonstrated Proficiency. It shows that a level of required training has been met. It is not limited to the air carrier at which the attendant is employed (although some initial documents showed the airlines where the holders were working), and is the attendant's personal property. It does have two ratings, Group 1 and Group 2 (listed on the certificate as "Group I" and "Group II"). Either or both of these may be earned depending upon the general type of aircraft, (propeller or turbojet), on which the holder has trained.[35]


There are also training schools, not affiliated with any particular airline, where students generally not only undergo generic, though otherwise practically identical, training to flight attendants employed by an airline, but also take curriculum modules to help them gain employment. These schools often use actual airline equipment for their lessons, though some are equipped with full simulator cabins capable of replicating a number of emergency situations. In some countries, such as France, a degree is required, together with the Certificat de formation à la sécurité (Safety training certificate).[36]

Language[edit]

Multilingual flight attendants are often in demand to accommodate international travellers. The languages most in demand, other than English, are French, Russian, Hindi, Spanish, Mandarin, Cantonese, Bengali, Japanese, Arabic, German, Portuguese, Italian, Turkish[37] In the United States, airlines with international routes pay an additional stipend for language skills on top of flight pay, and some airlines hire specifically for certain languages when launching international destinations. Carole Middleton recalled when interviewed in 2018 that "you had to be able to speak another language" when working in the industry in the 1970s.[38]

Height[edit]

Most airlines have height requirements for safety reasons, making sure that all flight attendants can reach overhead safety equipment. Typically, the acceptable height for this is over 152 cm but under 185 cm tall. Regional carriers using small aircraft with low ceilings can have height restrictions. .[39] Some airlines, such as EVA Air, have height requirements for purely aesthetic purposes.

In April 1936, flight attendant Nellie Granger aided survivors after the crash of , then walked 4 mi (6.4 km) through a snowstorm to find help, before returning to the crash scene.[94][95]

TWA Flight 1

Senior Purser saved the lives of passengers and crew when Pan Am Flight 73 was hijacked. She was killed while protecting children from the terrorists. After her death she received the Special Courage Award from the United States Department of Justice and India's highest civilian honour for bravery, the Ashoka Chakra.

Neerja Bhanot

Pakistani flight attendant (employee of Pakistan International Airlines) who received 1985's Flight Safety Foundation (FSF) Heroism Award for her brave handling of tense and dangerous situation during the 13 days of the Flight PK-326 hijacking ordeal.[96][97]

Naila Nazir

the two forward flight attendants, Arthur Bradbury and Joanna Toff, repeatedly crawled into the smoke filled and burning cabin to drag a number of passengers to safety, and were subsequently awarded the Queen's Gallantry Medal. The two rear flight attendants, Sharon Ford and Jacqui Ubanski, who opened the rear doors but were overwhelmed by fire and smoke were awarded the same medal posthumously.

British Airtours Flight 28M

when cabin crew recognised an emergency landing was imminent and commanded the passengers to "bend down ... hold your knees" to adopt the brace position.[98]

Scandinavian Airlines Flight 751

whose sole flight attendant, Robin Fech, provided emergency briefings, brace and evacuation commands to the passengers when the Embraer EMB 120 Brasilia aircraft sustained serious damage to one of its engines and crash landed. The NTSB accident report commended "the exemplary manner in which the flight attendant briefed the passengers and handled the emergency".[99]

Atlantic Southeast Airlines Flight 529

where a flight attendant, Barbara Jane Harrison, died saving passengers from an on-board fire and was posthumously awarded the George Cross.

BOAC Flight 712

in which a flight attendant was able to prevent a pilot from being lost through a cockpit window that had failed.

British Airways Flight 5390

on which the cabin crew provided safety briefings to their passengers, and on their own initiative, warned passengers of the impending crash by commanding passengers to adopt the brace position. At least one flight attendant is known to have assisted in rescuing trapped passengers.[100]

Southern Airways Flight 242

in which Kelly Duncan, the lone surviving flight attendant, passed the only life vest she could find to a passenger. She is recognised in the NTSB report for this "unselfish act".[101]

Air Florida Flight 90

TWA flight attendant who protected passengers during the TWA Flight 847 hijacking by assisting with negotiation efforts.

Uli Derickson

when a TWA Lockheed L-1011 aircraft crashed after an aborted takeoff in 1992. The aircraft was destroyed by fire. Nine flight attendants, along with five off-duty flight attendants, evacuated all 292 persons on board without loss of life. The NTSB in their after accident report noted, "The performance of the flight attendants during the emergency was exceptional and probably contributed to the success of the emergency evacuation."[102][103]

TWA Flight 843

On , cabin crew stopped the plane from being crashed by a mentally ill passenger.[104]

British Airways Flight 2069

Crew on prevented shoe bomber Richard Colvin Reid from blowing up the plane.[105]

American Airlines Flight 63

Flight attendants on prevented their plane from being hijacked by a passenger with mental health issues. Two of them were taken to hospital with stab wounds.[106]

Qantas Flight 1737

suffered a decompression which tore an 18-foot (5.5 m) section of fuselage away from the plane. The only fatality was flight attendant C.B. Lansing who was blown out of the airplane. Flight attendant Michelle Honda was thrown violently to the floor during the decompression but, despite her injuries, crawled up and down the aisle reassuring passengers.[107]

Aloha Airlines Flight 243

Flight Attendants on (Sergio Benetti, Judi Davidson, Laura Kayama) used procedures which were not specifically taught in training such as moving passengers to the front of the aircraft to move them away from the fire and smoke, and passing out towels for passengers to cover their nose and mouths with while the cabin was filling with smoke. Chief Flight Attendant Sergio Benetti was the first to open the front door of the aircraft, and escaped out that way, leaving all passengers and other crew behind.

Air Canada Flight 797

USAir flight attendant Richard DeMary helped to evacuate surviving passengers and another crew member from the burning wreckage of , which crashed during a go-around in adverse weather conditions after a failed landing attempt at Charlotte Douglas International Airport.[108]

USAir Flight 1016

Flight Attendants on successfully evacuated all passengers from the aircraft within 90 seconds despite the fact that the rear was rapidly filling with water.

US Airways Flight 1549

Nine cabin crew members aboard successfully evacuated the aircraft within 90 seconds after the A340-300 overran a runway at Toronto Pearson International Airport. The NTSB stated that the actions of the cabin crew contributed to the 100% survival rate.

Air France Flight 358

The flight attendants of kept the passengers calm after a bomb exploded during the flight from Cebu to Tokyo. Though one passenger was killed during the explosion, they took care of the injured passengers.

Philippine Airlines Flight 434

Air Dolomiti flight attendant

Air Dolomiti flight attendant

Scandinavian Airlines flight attendants in the 1960s

Scandinavian Airlines flight attendants in the 1960s

Southwest Airlines flight attendant

Southwest Airlines flight attendant

Swissair flight attendant, 1953

Swissair flight attendant, 1953

Wizz Air flight attendant

Wizz Air flight attendant

Emirates flight attendant in the A380 bar for Emirates

Emirates flight attendant in the A380 bar for Emirates

Flight attendants in popular culture

Barry, Kathleen (2007). . Durham, NC: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0822339465.

Femininity in Flight: A History of Flight Attendants

Tiemeyer, Phil (2013). . Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520274761. OCLC 871014980.

Plane Queer: Labor, Sexuality, and AIDS in the History of Male Flight Attendants

Vantoch, Victoria (2013). . Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-4481-6.

The Jet Sex: Airline Stewardesses and the Making of an American Icon

Wulfhart, Nell McShane (2022). . New York: Doubleday. ISBN 9780385546454. OCLC 1309091093. The Great Stewardess Rebellion: How Women Launched a Workplace Revolution at 30,000 Feet at Google Books.

The Great Stewardess Rebellion: How Women Launched a Workplace Revolution at 30,000 Feet