performance of ''L'Aiglon'' Nixon came to control theaters across the Midwest. On December 7, 1903, Samuel F. Nixon opened the Nixon Theater in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on the corner of 6th Avenue and William Penn Place. The ornate
Beaux Arts style building was opulently decorated. The interior featured massive fake-marble columns capped with gold, framed wall panels that seemed like damask silk, and velvet and silk draperies. The theater hosted many star performers, and put on elaborate shows. In 1905 four horse-drawn chariots came on stage in "Ben Hur", and a herd of camels, horses, goats featured in "Garden of Allah". The theater closed in 1950, when it was sold to
Alcoa. It was demolished to make way for the present
Regional Enterprise Tower. Samuel F. Nixon leased the 2,000-seat Apollo Theatre in
Atlantic City, New Jersey, which opened as
Nixon's Apollo Theatre in April 1908. It was soon the leading theater in the city, attracting fashionable audiences from New York and Philadelphia. Nixon's son
Fredrick G Nixon Nirdlinger became a partner in the Nixon & Zimmerman theatrical firm. He managed the Park Theatre and People’s Theatre in Philadelphia. An
Associated Press story distributed in December 1903 said "…Samuel F. Nixon Nirdlinger is today the richest and most powerful theatrical manager and promoter in America…. His son, Frederick G. Nixon Nirdlinger, is an assistant to his father, and has won (his own) fame in his profession…”
Marcus Loew developed a growing chain of
vaudeville theaters. They competed with the agency run by Fred G. Nixon-Nirdlinger, who filed a complaint with the
U.S. Department of Justice alleging that Loew and others had established a virtual monopoly of the vaudeville business. The "Philadelphia Vaudeville War" continued until an agreement was struck on 13 December 1913 by which Loew gave up his holdings in the
Metropolitan Opera House and Chestnut Street Opera House, and in exchange gained a stake in a new company being formed by
Benjamin Franklin Keith. Samuel F. Nixon, Fred Nixon-Nirdlinger, J. Fred Zimmerman and
Edward Franklin Albee were parties to the agreement. Samuel F. Nixon died on 13 November 1918 in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Fred G. Nixon-Nirdlinger was living in an apartment on the
French Riviera in 1931 when he was shot and killed by his wife, Charlotte. Their infant children were present in the apartment. The sensational story of the murder and subsequent trial, in which Charlotte was acquitted on the grounds of self-defense, made headlines for months. ==References==