The Project: Hanna Through History

Hanna Curtain
Colorful posters for the comedy “Apple of his Eye” and the musical “Funny Girl” on the theater curtain as it hung backstage at the Hanna Theatre in 1971.

“Built by Daniel R. Hanna as a tribute to his theatre-loving father, Marcus Hanna, the Hanna Theatre opened its doors on March 28, 1921, with an adaptation of Mark Twain’s The Prince and the Pauper. Billed as a ‘Broadway-Style Theater,’ the Hanna was located not on Euclid Avenue but around corner on the side street of East 14th. Its interior décor was opulent, finished in what was described as a combination of Italian Renaissance and Pompeian style, and the stage was described as ‘large enough… to present the best plays offered; but intimate enough to present the quietest comedy or drama to the best advantage.’ For three generations of Clevelanders, ‘I saw it at the Hanna' was a bragging point that could only be trumped by 'We saw it in New York.’ During its first two decades, the Hanna hosted such touring Broadway shows as The Student Prince and the Marx Brothers in Animal Crackers. There were also significant world premieres, including Noel Coward’s Design for Living, starring Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne and Coward himself, and Maxwell Anderson’s High Tor, with Burgess Meredith. The postwar era brought the golden age of the American musical theater to the Hanna, from Oklahoma! to Hair. The mirrors in its star dressing room have reflected the images of Ethel and John Barrymore, Helen Hayes, Katharine Cornell, and Henry Fonda. Since reopening a decade ago as a cabaret theater, the Hanna boasts the longest run in Cleveland theatrical history with Tony ‘n’ Tina’s Wedding.”

Courtesy of John Vacha’s, From Broadway to Cleveland: A History of the Hanna Theatre © 2007, Kent State University Press. Available online at Amazon.com

Other Interesting Hanna Links

Historical photos of the Hanna Theatre

Photos of the Hanna Theatre curtain

View of E.14th Street looking south from Euclid Avenue, 1936. (Hanna Theatre on left.)

Tony Brown’s September 27, 2007 article on the Hanna Theatre

Plain Dealer photo tour of Hanna