Broadway actors get dressed up on stage every night, but what about off stage? BroadwayStyleGuide.com has some stage stars "feeling pretty" in high-fashion. NY1’s Frank DiLella filed the following report.

Some of New York City's hottest theater stars have been getting a bit more glam lately, and it's not just for the red carpet, but rather for the Broadway Style Guide!

The online publication is under the direction of editor-in-chief Tony Marion.

"It's all style focused, and style for me is not just fashion and what you wear, it's where you go for drinks after a show, how you decorate your home,” Marion says.

Since launching in February of last year, The Guide has featured some of big Broadway names, from Tony winners like Kelli O'Hara and Sutton Foster to Darren Criss. 

"We were like, ‘You know - if we could put a little bit more of a viewfinder up on style and style of Broadway,’ we just kind of saw that there was a little bit of a need there," says Nathan Johnson, photo director at Broadway Style Guide.

One of the things The Broadway Style Guide is known for is taking some of Broadway's best off-stage and shooting them on-location in some interesting spots - like at The New York Shaving Company in Nolita.

“An American in Paris” star Robbie is the subject of The Guide's latest shoot, dressed in Todd Snyder.

"It's an old-school kind of throwback - I've never felt so fly before," Fairchild says.

Broadway performer turned creative director and fashion editor James Brown III styles all of the looks, and that's from Fairchild to a recent shoot with “The Color Purple's” Cynthia Erivo at the Paramount Hotel.

"We're shooting mostly spring/summer 2016 lines,” Brown says. “We're shooting Max Gengos, who is this great New York-based designer. It's a lot of color. We're showing a lot of skin."

"I like the idea that they're bringing fashion into Broadway and mix the two up because I feel like it's the perfect place for it,” Erivo says.

And bringing the style back to you the viewer or the audience.

Brown's thoughts on proper attire for the theater?

"I'm open to anything,” Brown says. “Just maybe not just flip flops, maybe not a baseball cap - but it doesn't have to be a tuxedo."

For more information, visit BroadwayStyleGuide.com.