Times Colonist

New site streams live theatre

- MARK KENNEDY

NEW YORK — A new online streaming service launches on Monday that hopes to one day become the Netflix of Broadway, offering highdefini­tion broadcasts of top theatrical events to computers and phones.

Broadway-HD currently has a modest list of plays and musicals ready to stream, but hopes to eventually be the place where theatre fans and educators turn for their live-event fix.

It was founded by Broadway producers Stewart F. Lane and Bonnie Comley, a Tony Award-winning husband-and-wife producing team behind such shows as On Your Feet!, A Gentleman’s Guide to Love & Murder and Legally Blonde.

“We’re not going to replace the Broadway experience, but if you can’t get to Broadway, get to Broadway-HD,” said Lane. “Hopefully it will whet your appetite to go see it live.”

Users can buy a monthly subscripti­on for $14.99 US or a yearly one for $169.99. There’s also free content. The shows can be streamed to computers, mobile devices and TVs — both Apple TV or Google Chromecast.

While sites such as iTunes, Amazon Video, Netflix and GooglePlay stream musicals and plays on phones and tablets, Broadway-HD hopes to become the go-to library to find live-captured theatrical events, whether from off-Broadway or the West End, after a show has been seen in cinemas or on cable TV.

While the service currently leans heavily on the archives of the BBC, WNET-TV in New York and Broadway Worldwide, the creators hope they will be able to expand their titles with partnershi­ps and their own captures. They’ve also added commentari­es, introducti­ons and documentar­ies.

Offerings at launch include more than 120 production­s, mostly classics from Shakespear­e and Anton Chekov. “A lot of it is classic archival pieces, but then we start layering in the new things and go out and start shooting new shows,” Comley said. “We’re looking for this to be the landing place.”

The site comes at a time when so-called event cinema has exploded. When once there was just the Metropolit­an Opera at the movie theatre, now there’s the Bolshoi Ballet, concerts from One Direction, circuses and a steady stream of English plays.

To those who sneer at reducing a live Broadway show to the size of an iPhone screen, Lane responds by pointing out that people also said the theatre experience would be diluted when microphone­s were introduced.

“This is part of an evolution,” he said. “We’re never going to replace the communal experience of seeing actors live. I understand that. New York has an amazing calibre of talent — of writers, directors and performers — that we’d like to share with the world. If they can’t get here in time, we can share that with the world in the best way we can.”

A sample of what you can now find on BroadwayHD includes Orlando Bloom in the 2013 Broadway revival of Romeo and Juliet, a live Jekyll & Hyde with David Hasselhoff in 2001, Helen Mirren in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Montego Glover and Chad Kimball in Memphis, Daniel Craig and Stephen Rea in Copenhagen from a BBC TV movie in 2002, and Rufus Sewel in Henry IV.

Up next will be Audra McDonald as Billie Holiday in Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar and Grill after it airs on HBO.

 ??  ?? Online streaming service BroadwayHD offers high-definition broadcasts of theatrical events for computers and phones.
Online streaming service BroadwayHD offers high-definition broadcasts of theatrical events for computers and phones.

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