Robin Byrd has made a career out of literally putting herself out there.
A bisexual former porn actress, she gained fame and cult status as the host of The Robin Bird Show, an adult-themed late-night public access television talk show that aired in New York City from 1977 to 1998. The half-hour episodes featured a variety of guests, mostly a bunch of porn stars wearing little or no clothes.
Full Frontal female nude appearances on Byrd’s shows were more the rule than the exception.
The show became an educational tool of sorts during the AIDS epidemic, with Byrd regularly urging viewers to practice safer sex, often demonstrating how to use condoms and dental dams. She also became a champion of free speech, filing lawsuits against the Reagan administration and Time Warner Cable to prevent the scramble of adult content. In one case, the Supreme Court ruled in her favor in 1995, making public access free from filtering and censorship.
“I became an activist by accident,” Bird says.
Now, at 71, Byrd is putting himself out there again. Now she’s the subject of a new HBO documentary, Van My Box: The Robin Bird Story, about her life as a New York cultural icon and the years she spent caring for her husband of 50 years, Shelley, after he was diagnosed with dementia.
The document documents Byrd’s efforts to organize his files and records. She and Shelly’s New York City apartment is stacked floor-to-ceiling with tapes of every episode of the show, which they hope to donate to educational and cultural institutions. At one point, Bird was rummaging through storage when he spotted the show’s distinctive neon sign and said he had an idea to reboot the show.
But that thought didn’t last long. “You’re only as good as the last thing you did. That’s what people remember,” Byrd tells me over Zoom from her apartment. “People ask me, ‘What are you doing now?’ My only answer to them is that I’m enjoying the life I’ve built. Why should I do more than that? Why should one have more than one purpose?
“This is not a race. I fulfilled my purpose,” she continues. “I have a home on Fire Island, but for years I was only home on the weekends because I worked in the city the rest of the week. I’m so happy to be retired.”
But she added: “It’s not like I’m not doing anything. I’m still spreading love and joy. In the winter, my tee dances at Monster (a queer bar in Manhattan), and in the summer, my tee dances at Fire Island.”
Rather, Bird says her legacy may include OnlyFans. Not only did she host and produce a talk show for over 20 years, she was also an early entrepreneur in a phone sex line.
“OnlyFans is a phone sex line with video,” Bird says. “People are lonely out there. I’m not on the airwaves anymore, so there’s OnlyFans and all that. If I was on the airwaves, they probably wouldn’t be making as much money. I always say video killed the radio stars, the internet killed the video stars, and Only Fans killed the rest.”
“Bang My Box” is a full-circle moment for her and the film’s producer, Sarah Jessica Parker. Bird remembers being invited to Parker’s early film premieres. “They called me and asked me to get six or eight hot guys in Speedos, G-strings, and jockstraps,” Byrd recalls.
She also remembers leaving thinking Parker wasn’t actually a fan. “It was a little rejection in my mind,” Bird says.
In fact, SJP has always been a fan of Bird. “When we were hugging on the red carpet at the[‘Bang My Box’]premiere, I said, ‘You know, I always thought you hated me, that you didn’t like me because of something I did,'” Byrd says. “She said, ‘No!'” And I said to her, “I’m so grateful and happy that you’re producing this.”

Stephanie Schwarm, Gillian Gunther, Matthew Broderick, Sarah Jessica Parker, Robin Byrd, and Michael Musto attend the ‘Van My Box: The Robin Byrd Story’ premiere during the 2026 Tribeca Festival at the SVA Theater in New York City on June 9th.
Getty Images of Tribeca Festival
Parker joined co-directors Jillian Gunther and Stephanie Schwamm after being introduced to them over FaceTime through a mutual agent. “They called us back and said, ‘[Parker]wants to do this. We’re going to call HBO.’ She called[HBO and Max Content Chairman and CEO]Casey Bloys, and Bloys, of course, was like, ‘We want to do this,'” Gunther said.
Schwam added, “It happened so fast. If you talk to Robin, she’ll tell you the universe told her it was time. She takes the lead on instinct.”
Could a scripted feature film or television series about Byrd’s life be next?
“I was talking to some people about the script when this story came to me,” Bird says. “They sent me a document to review. It was like 20 pages. I’m not a lawyer and this was legal fraud. I held it off because it didn’t feel right. But then this came along and it felt right because they told my story from a woman’s perspective. But they were also big fans. They loved me and I cherished them.”
Bird smiles. “I want my story to be told.”
“Bang My Box: The Robin Bird Story” will premiere on HBO on June 30th at 9pm ET. It will also be streamed on HBO Max.

