To me the backfill soil is more important than the rigidity of the wall. Think of that strip load as inducing a vertical stress component & horizontal stress component. The "radiating stress" is a function of the load intensity, strip width, backfill soil type and setback distance. Whether the "receiving end" of this stress is sheet pile wall or slurry wall is insignificant. The strip load could give hoots about this wall.
If you look at my attachment, it is implied in these equations that poisson's ration is 0.5 and my resultant, which is not shown, is 1.94 kip/ft applied at 4.5 below top of wall (assuming the footing strip is at the ground surface).
According to Bowles, he disagrees with the 2X and says just Boussinesq equation is sufficient. So the resultant now should be 0.97 kip/ft and location of thrust is still @ 4.5 ft below top of wall.
If you look at Terzaghi & Peck 1967, p 367-368, if we assume sandy soil, we get a thrust of 0.51 kip/ft, silty soil backfill, we get a thrust of 0.74 kip/ft & if it is Clay backfill we get 1.9 kip/ft (exactly same as 2X factor). So backfill soil type does make a difference.
If you look at Newman's,"Standard Cantilever Retaining Walls" book, 1976, p22, his method which is based on the City of Los Angeles Building Code, Circa 1970's, I get 0.07 kip/ft @ 4.2 ft thrust location. This is only 7% of the unmodified Boussinesq. It is just too small a value and I would dismiss this approach.
So we get a low value of 0.5 kip/ft & a high of 1.9 kip/ft. You decide. We didn't even get into trial wedge method & approaches by several other texts.