The Erlanger Theatre represents a special aspect of the nation’s theatrical history. The facade is a restrained but handsome adaptation of the late Beaux-Arts classic style to a Broadway theater; that its significant architectural features include an ornamental triple-arcade enclosed loggia, a classical frieze with theatrical masks, and Beaux-Arts inspired ornament.
The interior of this theatre is unusual among the Broadway theaters of the 1920s, eschewing Adamesque plasterwork in favor of a restrained Beaux-Arts classicism. Despite alterations the interior retains its original configuration as well as much of its original ornamentation.