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Robert Nederlander

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Nationality
  
United States

Nieces
  
Amy Nederlander

Education
  
University of Michigan

Role
  
Attorney

Name
  
Robert Nederlander


Robert Nederlander imagesbwwstaticcomupload35908tn500pjz08nov

Full Name
  
Robert Elliot Nederlander

Born
  
April 10, 1933 (
1933-04-10
)
Detroit, Michigan

Alma mater
  
B.A. University of Michigan J.D. University of Michigan Law School

Occupation
  
Live theater owner and operator

Known for
  
president of the Nederlander Organization minority owner of the New York Yankees

Spouse(s)
  
Caren Elaine Berman (divorced) Gladys Nederlander

Children
  
with Berman: Eric Nederlander Robert Nederlander Jr.

Parents
  
Sarah Applebaum, David T. Nederlander

Siblings
  
James M. Nederlander, Joseph Nederlander, Harry J. Nederlander, Frances Nederlander Kohn, Fred Nederlander

Nephews
  
James L. Nederlander, Scott Nederlander

People also search for
  
James M. Nederlander

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Robert Elliot Nederlander, Sr. (born April 10, 1933) is an attorney and former president of the Nederlander Organization, which has been involved in the live theatre industry since the early 20th century. He is also the former managing general partner of the New York Yankees. He served in this role during the suspension of George Steinbrenner.

Contents

Early life and education

Nederlander was born to a Jewish family in Detroit, Michigan, the youngest of six children born to Sarah (née Applebaum) and David T. "D.T." Nederlander. His father bought his first live theater in 1905, the Fisher Theater in Detroit (which is still owned by the family) and founded the family company, the Nederlander Organization. He has four brothers: Harry, Jimmy, Fred, and Joseph; and one sister, Frances. Nederlander graduated from the University of Michigan, where he played on the school's tennis team, and earned a J.D. from the University of Michigan Law School after which he established a law firm in Detroit.

Career

After his father's death in the 1960s, the Nederlander brothers continued to purchase theaters expanding nationally with Jimmy moving to New York City, Harry to San Francisco, and Joey remaining in Detroit. Their largest rivals were the Shubert family, the founders of Broadway theatre district in New York City. In 1973, Nederlander and his brothers joined with George Steinbrenner as limited partners when Steinbrenner purchased the New York Yankees of Major League Baseball. In 1981, he moved to New York City, the heart of the live theater industry in the United States to, to serve as president of the Nederlander Organization; while his brother Jimmy served as the frontman for the company. He was also named the chairman and chief executive officer of the Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Company in 1989. He resigned from the role in 1993 to focus on other business ventures. In 1990, when Steinbrenner was banned from the Yankees for his association with a known gambler (who he had hired to find dirt on Dave Winfield), Nederlander became the Yankees' managing general partner (Steinbrenner's oldest son, Hank, had declined the position). Nederlander resigned from the role, effective December 31, 1991, and was succeeded by Joe Molloy.

Personal life

Nederlander was married and divorced twice to his first wife, psychologist Caren Elaine Berman. They had two sons:

  • Eric Nederlander, a theatrical producer, who was briefly married to cookbook author Nina Danielle Sklar (who later married comedian Jerry Seinfeld). In 2004, he married Dr. Lindsey Kupferman in Jewish ceremony at the Breakers Hotel in Palm Beach, Florida. They divorced in 2007.
  • Robert Nederlander Jr., the president of Interactive Concepts Unlimited, a multimedia development company. In 1994, he married Suzanne Beth Meirowitz, a producer for CBS Evening News, in a Jewish ceremony in New York City.
  • His second wife, theater and television producer Gladys Nederlander (who had been previously married first to songwriter Fred Stryker and later to record and movie producer Milton Rackmil) died in 2008 at the age of 83.

    References

    Robert Nederlander Wikipedia