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Fats Domino's Walk Back To New Orleans To Air


Fats DominoFats Domino lost his sprawling yellow-and-white house in hurricane Katrina and with it, the keepsakes of an extraordinary career that took him from New Orleans honky-tonks to worldwide hitmaker.

When Katrina swamped his Lower 9th Ward neighborhood and 80 percent of his hometown with floodwater, Domino lost his home, three pianos, dozens of gold and platinum records, and other memorabilia.

So, when the 80-year-old singer took the stage at a popular New Orleans club for the first time after the 2005 storm, fans cheered and cried as he bopped the upbeat strains of "I'm Walkin"' and crooned "Ain't That a Shame," along with a host of other hits.

Footage from that appearance in May 2007, his first and last since Katrina, is the basis of a new documentary, Fats Domino: Walkin' Back to New Orleans, that will air on public broadcasting stations over the next few years.

Songs from the performance are interwoven with interviews from Domino's friends and fellow musicians, including Dr. John, Irma Thomas, Randy Newman, and Allen Toussaint. The roughly hour-long film is narrated by actor John Goodman, who has strong connections to the city.

"They did a good job," Domino said softly during an invitation-only showing of the film in New Orleans recently.

"It turned out real nice, and I'm real grateful they did that for me," he said as he sat among friends, swapping stories and nibbling on mini-crawfish pies.

Before the screening, reissues of his Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award and Hall of Fame awards for "Ain't That a Shame" and "Blueberry Hill" were presented to Domino. They were among memorabilia lost or destroyed in Katrina's flooding.

Domino's return to the stage at Tipitina's music club in 2007 is a highlight in what otherwise has been a rough few years. Besides losing his home and almost all of his belongings, Domino's wife, Rosemary, died in April. The couple had been married for more than 50 years.

"He's missing her," said Charisse Smith, Domino's 35-year-old granddaughter, who was among those to get a first look at the film. "My grandmother was there for him every day, all day. Her presence is definitely missed."

Domino now lives in the New Orleans suburb of Harvey, but often visits his publishing house, an extension of his old home in the Lower 9. The studio, a classic shotgun double built in the 1930s, was rebuilt after Katrina by the Tipitina's Foundation. It is one of a few refurbished structures in the neighborhood.

Though surrounded by blocks of abandoned homes and overgrown lots, "he loves to go and visit that house," von Kurnatowski said. "He has tremendous memories of decades using that building, of musicians he's worked with, and of time spent there with his family."

Footage of Domino walking through his gutted home is included in the documentary, along with a recording session with Robert Plant during the making of the album Goin' Home: A Tribute to Fats Domino that was recorded last year.

The film documentary chronicles Domino's career - including his bouts of performance anxiety in recent years - and snapshots of his start in music, including a photo of Domino with trumpeter Dave Bartholomew, who helped him cut his first single, "The Fat Man," in 1949.

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