Steiner's marriage to the former Jan Steele ended in divorce, but the two continued to live together. They had two sons, Ace and Duke, and a daughter, Jacklyn Montgomery.[3]
He died in Cincinnati at the age of 69 on November 3, 2016.[1][3]
Career
Steiner had already achieved considerable success as a discount stockbroker and professional poker player[1] when his childhood friend Rocco Landesman approached him to invest in Big River, a musical based on The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, in the 1980s.[2] Despite a slow start at the box office, Big River went on to win seven Tony Awards.[2] Steiner and Landesman, along with a group of other investors assembled by Steiner, went on to produce Into the Woods, The Secret Garden, Smokey Joe's Cafe, Hairspray, Jersey Boys, and The Producers, which went on to win a record 12 Tony Awards in 2001.[1][2][3]
Throughout his producing career, Steiner largely focussed on the marketing, investor relations, and merchandising side of the business. He worked out of his childhood home on Rose Hill Avenue, in the North Avondale neighborhood[4] of Cincinnati.[3] In between producing Broadway hits, he continued to play poker professionally, in 1992 winning $105,000 and the seven-card-stud title in the World Series of Poker.[1] He also won trophies at the Super Bowl of Poker in Lake Tahoe, the Superstars of Poker, and the Diamond Jim Brady Tournament in Bell Gardens, California.[5] Steiner was also a part-owner of the Cincinnati Reds,[2] and one of the original investors in the Chi-Chi's restaurant chain,[3] buying stock when he was just in fourth grade.[5]