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Word: walleyes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...rich man hunter (Shelley Fabares) who offers him $5,000 to make beautiful music for her alone. Another is a lady sociologist (Diane McBain) who wants to interview him in depth, just to prove that her "analysis of the mating motive is right on the button." Still another (Deborah Walley) is a lady instrumentalist who offers him a mean rhythm section and something that in her wide Midwestern accent sounds like "goremay...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Creaky Pelvis | 11/11/1966 | See Source »

There are a couple of new offerings. Maureen O'Hara's daughter Quinn is Rathbone's daughter Sinistra; Deborah Walley is Kirk's semifrigid girlfriend; and one Aron Kincaid does a "new" Hollywood type--the dumb blond beachboy...

Author: By Mark Randall, | Title: The Ghost in the Invisible Bikini | 4/21/1966 | See Source »

James Darren, as the exquisitely manicured, coiffed, plucked and dentured Moondoggie, is on his third time out with the hyperthyroid little heroine (previous Gidgets: Sandra Dee, Deborah Walley). He seems doomed to traipse after gidgets until the apotheosis of the theme, which will doubtless be called Gidget Meets Tammy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Surf Boredom | 8/16/1963 | See Source »

...boot when their mysterious absentee landlord discovers that they have been living rent-free in his house all summer? Such a turn of events is unthinkable, and sure enough, nobody thinks of it. Instead, everybody has wholesome fun. Sam, the comic sheep dog, scares prissy Cousin Julia (Deborah Walley) into a conniption; Little Brother cons the barber into shearing off his Buster Brown bangs; there is a lemonade party and a punch-and-pumpkin Halloween housewarming. Burl Ives pipes The Ugly Bug Ball, and a peaceable bestiary of beavers, owls, foxes, deer, spiders, crickets and caterpillars simultaneously stamps the film...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Nobody Here but Us Chickens | 8/2/1963 | See Source »

...cooperation of" assorted hotels, railroads and steamship lines that seem to gain in glamour upon being transferred to film. This time Fred MacMurray and Jane Wyman, an ever-lovin' couple from Terre Haute, Ind., are off to France with their three typical kids: a sweet plump daughter (Deborah Walley) with steely morals, an engagingly nutty teen-age son (Tommy Kirk), and another boy (Kevin Corcoran), 12, whose freckled wit comes forth in lines like ''I know who Napoleon was. He was the guy that had the same trouble with the English that Custer had with the Indians...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Escargots | 5/25/1962 | See Source »

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