The Boss is coming back to Broadway — and much earlier than expected.

Rocker Bruce Springsteen, whose Broadway show ran at the Walter Kerr Theatre in 2017 and 2018, will play Broadway once again beginning June 26 — less than three weeks away.

That imminent start date will almost definitely make “Springsteen on Broadway” the first show to play the Great White Way since theaters were shuttered in March 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic.

This time, the intimate concert will play at the larger St. James Theatre a few blocks away from the Kerr and run through Sept. 4.

Audience members will have to prove they have been vaccinated to enter — either by their paper card or the New York Excelsior Pass — suggesting that performances will be at 100 percent capacity. Anybody under the age of 16 will have to show a negative COVID test result. Entry times will be staggered, and the theater has installed new air filters.

The show’s exhaustive FAQ page does not mention mask-wearing.


  Bruce Springsteen takes his final “Springsteen on Broadway” curtain call at Walter Kerr Theatre on Dec. 15, 2018. Getty Images Bruce Springsteen takes his final “Springsteen on Broadway” curtain call at Walter Kerr Theatre on Dec. 15, 2018. Getty Images

However, there is already local precedent for shedding face coverings inside a theater. Closing night of the Tribeca Film Festival, on June 19, will see Radio City Music Hall at full capacity with a vaccinated, maskless crowd.

The reopening of Broadway has become something of a free for all. Initially, Gov. Cuomo announced that Broadway shows could kick off performances again Sept. 14, and heavy-hitters “Hamilton,” “Wicked” and “The Lion King” said during a celebratory “Good Morning America” appearance that they’d all start up on that day and welcome back audiences to the neighborhood.

Not so fast, Simba. The state’s restrictions have since been eased; a Broadway show could theoretically play to a full-capacity vaccinated crowd tomorrow if it had the means to (most do not). So, “Hadestown,” the 2019 Tony winner for Best Musical, announced it would come back Sept. 2. And “Pass Over,” which played at Lincoln Center in 2018, said it would begin previews on Broadway Aug. 4. And there will probably be even more shakeups in the schedule.

But there is no show with the ability to start earlier than Springsteen can. The small, intermission-less, acoustic performance — which was filmed for Netflix — features only the man himself on a stool with a cameo from his wife, Patti Scialfa. The couple could rehearse in their Colts Neck, New Jersey, kitchen.

And the production will have no trouble selling tickets. During its initial run, every performance was sold out, and seats popped up on the secondary market for as much as $6,700. 

Since “Springsteen” will likely be the only show on Broadway for months, it will surely be one of the hardest tickets to come by — anywhere.


  Bruce Springsteen performs onstage at the Walter Kerr Theatre. Rob DeMartin Bruce Springsteen performs onstage at the Walter Kerr Theatre. Rob DeMartin
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