Rose Byrne Drives Fallen Angels Broadway Stream on June 5
Rose Byrne pushes fallen angels broadway beyond the Todd Haimes Theatre on June 5, when BroadwayHD begins a live stream at 7 PM ET for subscribers. The Roundabout Theatre Company revival will stay available on demand for two weeks, through June 19, turning a limited engagement into a short digital window.
Byrne and O'Hara
The production carries five Tony Award nominations, including Best Revival, which makes the livestream more than a convenience play for viewers who missed the theater run. Byrne, an Oscar nominee and Tony nominee, stars as Jane Banbury, while Kelli O'Hara, also Tony-nominated here, plays Julia Sterroll.
Scott Ellis directs the staging, with the current Broadway run officially opened on April 19 after previews began on March 27. The live stream gives BroadwayHD subscribers access to a revival that is still in its Broadway engagement through June 7, so the digital release lands while the show remains active on stage.
June 19 Window
The tighter business story is the access window. BroadwayHD is not opening a permanent archive title here; it is selling a two-week replay period that ends June 19, which should concentrate viewing around the live date and the days immediately after it. For a Tony-nominated revival, that is a useful second life without extending the Broadway house schedule.
Fallen Angels also comes with historical baggage that gives the revival more than period-comedy polish. The work premiered in London in 1925 and arrived on Broadway in 1927, and early productions drew censors over its depiction of women acknowledging premarital sex. That older controversy is now part of the draw, but the current release strategy is practical: one live broadcast, a limited replay, then the title goes back to its stage-only footing.
For subscribers, the move is straightforward. June 5 is the date to watch live at 7 PM ET, and June 19 is the cutoff for on-demand viewing. If the live slot does what BroadwayHD wants, the revival reaches viewers far beyond the Todd Haimes Theatre without giving up the scarcity that still drives Broadway value.