Angelina Jolie was spotted stocking up on groceries at a Bristol Farms in Los Angeles on Tuesday night.
The 46-year-old Academy Award-winner was joined on the errand run by her youngest daughter Vivienne, 13, who helped her carry bags out of the store.
Jolie looked ultra chic in an oversized black coat styled with a pair of black skinny jeans.
Stocking up: Angelina Jolie was spotted stocking up on groceries at a Bristol Farms in Los Angeles on Tuesday night.
The Maleficent actress slipped her feet into a pair of black leather booties and toted her belongings in a purse resting in the crook of her arm.
Her brunette hair was worn down and she accessorized with a pair of tinted glasses.
Meanwhile, Vivienne looked comfortable in a white crewneck sweatshirt, shorts, and a pair of slip on Nike sneakers.
The mother-daughter duo carried several reusable bags filled with grocery items, while also carrying a pack of canned sparkling water.
Helping hand: The 46-year-old Academy Award-winner was joined on the errand run by her youngest daughter Vivienne, 13, who helped her carry bags out of the store
Minimalist: Her brunette hair was worn down and she accessorized with a pair of tinted glasses
Angelina shares Vivienne, as well as daughters Zahara, 17, Shiloh, 15, and sons Maddox, 20, Pax, 18, and Knox, 13, with ex husband Brad Pitt.
But regardless of having six kids to look after at her home in Los Angeles, Angelina has managed to find time to also work with teens around the world to better their education in the fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics.
The Eternals star has been doing so in partnership with the Maddox Jolie Program which is overseen by her eldest son Maddox.
On Sunday the red carpet fixture shared a post to Instagram that detailed her recent work adding that she ‘loves’ to see young women excel.
Chic: The Maleficent actress slipped her feet into a pair of black leather booties and toted her belongings in a purse resting in the crook of her arm
The rumoured girlfriend of singer The Weeknd said she is very hands on with one student in particular.
‘I have been working with Gitanjali Rao, fifteen-year old problem-solver and innovator,’ began the ex of Brad Pitt.
‘She is a leading light in promoting science, technology, engineering and mathematics for 𝘤𝘩𝘪𝘭𝘥ren and young people across the world. Most of all for girls, who are under-represented in the sciences, and particularly in ICT, a growth area for employment in the future,’ added the Maleficent star.
ICT stands for Information and Communications Technology.
Good heart: Angelina Jolie has six kids to look after at her home in Los Angeles. But the Oscar-winning actress has managed to find time to also work with teens around the world to better their education. Seen in October in Italy
An inspiration: The rumoured girlfriend of singer The Weeknd said she is very hands on with one student in particular. ‘I have been working with Gitanjali Rao, fifteen-year old problem-solver and innovator,’ began the ex of Brad Pitt
Jolie then wrote that in late December 2021, students from Samlot High School, a school MJP Foundation supports, connected with Gitanjali on the other side of the world, to inspire and be inspired.
The MJP Foundation is dedicated to alleviating extreme rural poverty, protecting the environment and conserving wildlife in rural northwestern Cambodia.
Jolie first visited Cambodia in 2000 when she made the film Tomb Raider. She was struck by the beauty of the country and the warmth of the Cambodian people.
A year later she returned with the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR). In 2003 she set-up the Maddox Jolie Program that is today the Maddox Jolie-Pitt Foundation (MJP).
Doing well: Jolie then wrote that in late December 2021, students from Samlot High School, a school MJP Foundation supports, connected with Gitanjali on the other side of the world, to inspire and be inspired
The MJP Foundation is close to her heart: In 2003 she set-up the Maddox Jolie Program that is today the Maddox Jolie-Pitt Foundation (MJP)
‘They talked about observation, learning, perseverance, courage, and communication. Gitanjali has engaged with more than 50,000 students around the world,’ she wrote.
In the past two years, Covid has done so much damage to the learning and opportunities of 𝘤𝘩𝘪𝘭𝘥ren, but students like these in Cambodia are ‘fighting to continue and finish their education,’ Angelina also shared.
‘I love seeing these young people meeting across languages and cultures, to encourage, support and teach each other,’ she noted.