Susana, Lady Walton

Lady Walton
Born 30 August 1926
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Died 21 March 2010 (aged 83)
Ischia, Italy
Nationality Argentinian and British
Occupation writer and garden creator
Known for being married to the composer William Walton
Spouse William Walton (m. 1948-1983; his death)

Susana, Lady Walton, MBE (born Susana Valeria Rosa Maria Gil Passo) (30 August 1926 – 21 March 2010) was the wife of the composer Sir William Walton (1902–1983). She was a writer, and the creator of the gardens of La Mortella.[1]

She was the daughter of a prominent Argentinian lawyer, Dr. Enrique Gil. She was working at the British Council in Buenos Aires when she met Walton in September 1948. They married in December 1948. The couple settled on the Italian island of Ischia where she created the gardens of La Mortella.[2] The residence hosted many celebrities, including Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh, Hans Werner Henze, W. H. Auden, Terence Rattigan, Binkie Beaumont, Maria Callas and Charlie Chaplin. It was there that Walton died on 8 March 1983.

She played alongside her husband in Walton's only acting role; he played King Frederick Augustus II of Saxony in the 1983 miniseries, Richard Wagner, directed by Tony Palmer, while Lady Walton "stood at his side in regal attire" as the King's wife (Maria Anna of Bavaria). She also appeared in Ken Russell's Classic Widows (1995) and Palmer's At the Haunted End of the Day.

Shortly after her marriage she had an abortion at Walton's insistence, as he did not want any children.[3] She wrote two books and created the William Walton Foundation in 1983.

Lady Walton was decorated with an honorary degree from the University of Nottingham, the MBE in 2000[4] and the title of Grande Ufficiale della Repubblica Italiana. In 1990 she made a well received recording of Walton's Façade.

She died on 21 March 2010, aged 83, from natural causes. She is survived by a brother, Harry, and several nieces and nephews.

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