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AGAINST ALL ODDS

I grew up on a council estate – people thought I was destined for life as a drug addict but now I’m topping the charts

Read on to find out which celebrities also came from council homes and went onto achieve huge success

SITTING on the sofa in her council-owned home, Lily Dee could hardly believe the song playing on the radio was in fact one of her own.

It was a huge 'pinch me' moment for Lily because she had never trained as a fully-fledged singer but against all odds, but her new found fame was a world away from her tough childhood.

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Lily Dee reveals people thought she'd make nothing of her life after a turbulent childhoodCredit: Supplied
But now she has over one million followers on social media and has hit the UK music chartsCredit: instagram/councilestatequeen_
She's proved time and time again that you can break the cycleCredit: instagram/councilestatequeen_

But the 36-year-old singer, who is currently single, is proof that dreams can become reality regardless of background after becoming a chart-topper and social media star.

Within just 24 hours of her song 'Playing for Time' being released on August 16, it went to number six on the iTunes UK chart and number three on the dance chart as well as number 17 on the Singles Chart.

But her rise to fame has been far from easy and in an exclusive interview, she tells Fabulous: “I didn't have the best start to life and didn't have the best opportunities growing up on a council estate in an underprivileged area.

“I was in my house with no food, no warm clothing sometimes, and just trying to get by, just trying to survive and get food for that day for me and my siblings.

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“So to have all these opportunities later on in life...I'm just trying to milk them and get the most out of them.”

The success has been bittersweet for Lily who grew up in poverty with drug addict parents and didn't have the opportunity to find out where her passions in life lay.

She explains: “When I was young I wasn't exposed to music, dancing, singing, you know, people were going to cheerleading club, people were going to football, people were going to drama school.

“I was never given the opportunity to express myself or to find out what I'm good at and to see if I can create change in my life."

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Poverty wasn’t Lily's only hurdle - her life at home was also dangerous due to her parents’ lifestyles.

“Both of my parents were on drugs, it was very apparent, they did try and go to parents' evening and stuff, but there was a lot of drama and a lot of trauma,” she adds.

From Rags to Riches: Celebrities Who Rose from Council Estates

“We sometimes had drug dealers putting petrol bombs through the windows.

"My parents weren't bad people, they didn’t make the choice to have children and get addicted to drugs.”

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I was beat down as a child, you know, ‘You'll never amount to anything...As soon as I was old enough I jumped straight into the rat race and had to work three jobs to pay bills and vowed to never go hungry again."

Lily Dee

Now, Lily helps care for her dad after he was attacked at random in a park last year.

But from a young age Lily, who is from Manchester and still lives there, knew she didn’t want to follow in her parents' footsteps, and she refused to be lured into selling drugs which was the norm in her area.

The reality of living in a council house

LEANNE Hall, Digital Writer at Fabulous, has discussed what it was like growing up in a council house, and why those living in such properties are often judged...

When I was a child I grew up in a council house, and was blissfully unaware of the discrimination that came with that, until I became an adult.
My younger years were spent running up and down the stairs of my flat, meeting with other friends who lived there and making the most of the communal garden.
But now, it seems no matter your circumstance, everyone has something to say about why you shouldn’t be there.
Living just outside of London like I did, rent prices are still high, and as my mum was at home raising three kids at the time, it wasn’t easy to find a job that fit around that.
People in council houses are often labelled as ‘scroungers’ or ‘lazy’ but it’s nothing of the sort.
Most families in council homes experience overcrowding, and let’s not even mention the horrendous amount of damp and mould that comes from living in old social housing that hasn’t had work done to them in 50 or so years.
It’s not ideal for many, but it does provide a secure home without the fear your rent will shoot up every single year, which I would argue is vital to children growing up on the poverty line.

Instead, she had her sights set firmly on success and reveals: “As soon as I was old enough I jumped straight into the rat race and had to work three jobs, working as a mechanic before heading to work in TKMaxx and a pub to pay bills and vowed to never go hungry again.

“I was beat down as a child and told I would never amount to anything."

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But at the age of 25, Lily left England to work as a fire dancing entertainer across the world including Egypt and Spain, an opportunity which came to her via a friend.

Four days later she was on the plane.

However, when she returned to the UK when the holiday season ended, Lily found herself in a violent relationship and was re-housed to a different area by the local council.

Four years ago, she found her niche, making online comedy sketches about what it was like growing up on a council estate.

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