Katie Piper has emerged as a formidable champion for vulnerable and disadvantaged people, building her life around helping others after surviving a brutal acid attack in 2008. The best-selling author, broadcaster, and charity campaigner credits the wave of kindness she experienced during her darkest days for shaping her mission. Speaking ahead of hosting the Variety Club Showbusiness Awards, she reflected on how the support she received from the NHS, charities, and the British public inspired her to stand up for those who are "different, disadvantaged or forgotten." She emphasised that true charity goes beyond money; it involves time, energy, compassion, and using one’s own story to help others.

This year marks Piper’s first time hosting the star-studded Variety Awards, an event celebrating excellence in entertainment while raising funds for disabled and disadvantaged children. The awards evening honours notable figures such as England football captain Leah Williamson and legendary singer Petula Clark. But for Piper, the glamour is secondary to the cause. During a recent visit to Meadow High School in Uxbridge, supported by Variety, she witnessed firsthand how the charity’s Sunshine Coaches – specially adapted buses – provide disabled and disadvantaged children with freedom, independence, and access to experiences that many take for granted, such as swimming and museum visits. She described these resources as “lifelines” rather than luxuries, vital to giving children a chance to be part of the world.

Her involvement with the Variety Awards connects deeply with her broader charity work. The Katie Piper Foundation, launched in 2009, supports survivors of burns and disfigurement, helping them access rehabilitation and rebuild confidence. Having undergone over 250 operations herself, Piper remains resolutely positive, rejecting victimhood and focusing on meaningful change. She was honoured with an OBE in 2022 for her services to charity, recognising her tireless commitment to those affected by burns. The foundation offers personalised physical, mental, and emotional support through a team informed by lived experience, helping survivors and their families navigate recovery.

Beyond burns survivors, Piper extends her advocacy to women in prison. Volunteering and facilitating workshops inside women’s prisons, she offers confidence-building and therapeutic activities such as poetry classes and park runs. Her engagement began after inmates reached out to her, naming a wing after her in a Louisiana prison. This inspired her to create the documentary Locked Up in Louisiana, which explored how female prisoners in the US are often incarcerated for acts of self-defence. The experience underscored for her the cyclical nature of trauma—how victims can become perpetrators—a cycle she is determined to help break.

Motherhood has further deepened Piper’s empathy, connecting her to the fragility and preciousness of life. She notes that kindness was a fundamental value in her upbringing in a close-knit village where her mother was a teacher and the community cared for one another. It is this enduring spirit of kindness that continues to guide her life and work. Speaking about the Variety Awards, Piper feels the responsibility keenly, wanting to do right by the children and families the charity supports – a sentiment backed by her close relationship with Simon Cowell, a longtime patron of her foundation and a previous lifetime achievement honouree at the event.

In addition to her charitable activities, Katie Piper is an established media personality, presenting ITV1’s The Katie Piper Breakfast Show and serving as a regular panellist on Loose Women. She has authored over 15 best-selling books, spanning autobiographical works to children’s series, and is a sought-after keynote speaker on topics including happiness and resilience. Her advocacy has also involved raising awareness of mental health and domestic violence, combining her public platform with personal passion to drive positive societal change.

Katie Piper’s multifaceted work—rooted in resilience, kindness, and lived experience—has made her a beacon of hope and empowerment for many. As she steps onto the stage at the Variety Club Showbusiness Awards, her focus remains on transforming celebrity and spectacle into genuine support and opportunities for the most vulnerable children across the UK.

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Source: Noah Wire Services