Walley featured in all three.She played Colonel Lucy Turner in Sergeant Deadhead (1965) opposite Gale Gordon and Pat Buttram, and was cast alongside Frankie Avalon and Yvonne Craig in Ski Party (1965).In 1962 Walley had married the actor and producer John Ashley, but their union was short-lived and by 1966 they were divorced. The same year she began to date Elvis Presley after they had appeared together in Spinout (1966) She said,There was little time for any romance We went out on dates. Elvis would take off on his motorbike with me holding tight on the back. He opened my eyes and made me aware of the importance of having a personal relationship with your higher power He introduced me to many different religions We were never off our faces on drugs. Why, whenever I went to his house we just sat and ate ice-cream and chocolate cookies.Among Walley's television work was the sitcom The Mothers-in-Law (1967-69), in which she played Eve Arden's student daughter.Away from the camera, Walley was fascinated with Native American culture.
She also toured high schools teaching students to deal with their problems through creativity. She co-founded two children's theatres and the Swiftwind Theater, which enabled young American-Indians to develop acting, writing and production skills for the screen.Walley made her last film, The Severed Arm, in 1975, but continued to perform on television. She appeared in the detective series The Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew Mysteries and Simon & Simon, and, more recently, provided the voice of "Foxglove" for the cartoon series Chip 'n' Dale Rescue Rangers (1989), played Ethel in Baywatch (1999) and made a cameo appearance playing Myrna in the soap opera Passions (1999).During the 1990s, she wrote and produced The Vision of Seeks-to-Hunt Great starring the Native American actors Michael Horse and Eagle. It won Best Short Subject award at the 1992 American Indian Film Festival, among other accolades.Austin Mutti-Mewse. Jes?guirre Ortiz de Z?te, priest, writer, translator and publisher: born Madrid 9 June 1934; married 1978 Cayetana Fitz-James Stuart, Duchess of Alba; died Madrid 11 May 2001.
Jes?guirre Ortiz de Z?te, priest, writer, translator and publisher: born Madrid 9 June 1934; married 1978 Cayetana Fitz-James Stuart, Duchess of Alba; died Madrid 11 May 2001. Jes?guirre, 14th Duke of Alba, inspired an intellectual and cultural renaissance in a Spain which had been suffocated by Franco's dictatorship, and was recently hailed by the director of the Spanish Academy as "one of Spain's great intellectual figures".Aguirre entered the priesthood and introduced the philosophy of the Frankfurt School to Spain, but he became best known among his compatriots as consort of Cayetana Fitz-James Stuart y Silva, the Duchess of Alba, possessor of 44 noble titles and Spain's grandest grandee.Aguirre was born in 1934 and educated among the Salesian brothers in Santander, where he studied philosophy before becoming a Jesuit priest. He made contact with freethinkers from Spain's so-called "generation of 27", those responsible for the brief flowering of liberal ideas who were silenced in the 1930s by civil war followed by 40 years of censorship.He went to Munich in 1955 to study theology, and wrote his doctoral thesis on the English Franciscan philosopher William of Occam. While in Germany he became influenced by the progressive ideas of the Frankfurt School, attending lectures by Theodor Adorno, whose works he later introduced to Spain. He returned home in 1962, and in 1969 abandoned the priesthood, saying that "it didn't answer all my questions".He took up publishing and, as director of Taurus books from 1969 to 1977, established the company as the principal source of philosophical works in Spain. He translated and published for the first time classics by Walter Benjamin, Hannah Arendt, Adorno, Max Horkheimer, Karl Kraus and Wilhelm Dilthey as well as offering young Spanish philosophers like Fernando Savater their first published outlet.During these years, as the dying days of Franco's rule gave way to halting steps towards democracy, Aguirre organised meetings between Christians and Marxists, bringing together political opponents whose mutual understanding helped ensure the peaceful birth of a democratic Spain after Franco's death in 1975 "What were we?" he asked years later "The Trojan horse? Nothing so important. We were just the men who held the bridle, we didn't know whether of a horse or a donkey."The first democratic government of Adolfo Suarez appointed him Director General of Music in 1977, and Aguirre supervised the creation of national choirs and orchestras, and the national classical ballet.
