Architect Stanford White began a scandalous affair with Evelyn Nesbit, a sixteen-year-old chorus girl appearing on Broadway in "Floradora."
Two years later, Evelyn dumped him for actor John Barrymore, then married millionaire cocaine addict Harry K. Thaw, heir to a railroad fortune. Soon after the marriage, upon learning his wife's virginity had been lost earlier to White, the enraged Thaw hired four private investigators to trail White.
On June 26, 1906, White attended the opening night of "Mam'zelle Champagne," a revue in which he invested. In the middle of a number called "I Could Love a Million Girls," Thaw shot him three times at point-blank range. White died instantly and was buried in Long Island. Newspapers everywhere printed lurid details of the scandal for months.
Thaw was tried, declared not guilty by reason of insanity, and spent seven years in an asylum. Promptly upon his return to society, he divorced Evelyn. She returned to the stage, took drugs, attempted suicide, sold her story to the movies (she's played by youthful Joan Collins in "The Girl on the Red Velvet Swing"), and died in 1967 at age eighty-two.
via http://www.museyon.com/.../chronicles-of-old-new-york.../
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