"If it wasn't for the Big Issue, I would never have escaped a life that was leading me towards only one ending that I can think of," says Lorna Tucker, the award-winning film director who spent two years living on the streets as a homeless teen.
Now she's an ambassador for the UK's Big Issue, which helps those locked in poverty, Today reports.
"The work the organization does in order to support those locked in poverty is invaluable, especially now, with people facing the worst set of circumstances you can possibly imagine," says Lord John Bird, who appeared in Tucker's recent documentary Someone's Daughter, Someone's Son.
Tucker's first feature documentary, Westwood: Punk, Icon, Activist, premiered at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival, Variety reports.
Her second feature documentary, Am, is a look at the abuse of Native American women over the past 60 years.
"Not only were they responsible for saving my life, but for helping me to see that there was a life for me outside of addiction and homelessness," Tucker says in a press release.
Someone's Daughter, Someone's Son was released this year.
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