Miss Dee's Kitchen, the stage play

Born in Akron, Ohio and raised in Memphis, Tennessee, Katrina A. Walker, a serial entrepreneur, is quickly becoming a force in entertainment to be reckoned with. As the middle child to four other siblings, Katrina never suffered from the middle child syndrome – as from birth, she was always determined to stand out from the rest. Read more >>

Katrina Walker Presents “Miss Dee’s Kitchen”

Ms. Dee gives advice on anything and everything and she keeps everyone full of drinks, good food, happiness and laughter.

“Miss Dee’s Kitchen“ is a hilariously funny sitcom starring Katrina Walker as Miss Dee, the “Matriarch Of Her Neighborhood”, and Palmer Williams as Reverend Bucky, the stanky preacher, who’s allergic to water. It also stars the handsome Tony Grant, from Tyler Perry’s Love Thy Neighbor, as “Pretty Tony” and Cheryl Pepsii Riley from “Tyler Perry’s Why Did I Get Married & Madea’s Class Reunion”.  See More >>

Katrina Walker Presents Miss Dee & Family

Unbreakable is the riveting story of Katrina Walker, a self-made millionaire who went from being an abused teen bride and mother of four, to one of the most successful women in her region.

It’s the story of five marriages and a page-turning roller-coaster ride through each of them, including perilous situations that included being penniless, homeless, and ultimately a millionaire. She brings you in with action and emotion from page one, recounting a horrific home invasion that nearly took her life, and the day her beloved mother dies. The reader goes deep into her life growing up in Memphis TN. From when her mother left to go get cigarettes, and returned 9 months later from Ohio with a newborn Katrina, to growing up in Orange Mound (the first place Blacks could own property) in the home built by her great-grandfather. At the age of 8, Walker figured out how to make money by ironing sheets for her neighbors, and discovered her business sense. As a child in the 1960’s, she writes of Dr. MLK Jr. visiting Memphis to speak up for sanitation workers like her grandfather, only to be assassinated there. These events planted a seed in her that grew into the desire to empower her people, but only after the wild, sometimes hilarious, often emotional road to empowering herself.

“This book will make you laugh, cry and provoke thought.” – J.D.