It’s only natural to want to look beautiful. So what plastic surgeries has Michaela Coel endured to achieve this goal? We have collected all plastic surgery information below, whether it’s a facelift, boob job, or anything else.
Biography/Wiki
Poet, singer-songwriter, and actress who wrote the play Chewing Gum Dreams, which was soon-after awarded the Alfred Fagon Award. It later became a television series, Chewing Gum, in which she starred in and won the Best Female Comedy Performance in the British Academy Television Awards.
She trained at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London, England.
In 2016 she appeared in several episodes of the E4 series The Aliens and the same year appeared in Netflix’s series Black Mirror. In 2021, she became the first Black woman to win an Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Limited Series, Movie, or Dramatic Special for her work on I May Destroy You.
Plastic Surgery
Which plastic surgery procedures have Michaela Coel done? Below we have compiled a list of all known facts about the stars beauty enhancements:
Nose Job | N/A |
---|---|
Boob Job | N/A |
Breast Reduction | N/A |
Facelift | N/A |
Lips | N/A |
Fillers | N/A |
Botox | N/A |
Liposuction | N/A |
Butt Implants | N/A |
Butt Lift | N/A |
Eyelid Surgery | N/A |
Plastic Surgery Pics
Check out these pictures of Michaela Coel. Is there any plastic surgery involved?


Quotes
“Chewing Gum’ is kind of like the world I wish I grew up in. There wasn’t really a sense of community growing up.”
Michaela Coel
“When I grew up, my race was not a thing. My identity was in my class. It was not about colour on my estate.”
Michaela Coel
“If there’s anyone out there that looks a bit like me, or just feels a little bit out of place just trying to get into performing, you are beautiful; embrace it. You are intelligent; embrace it. You are powerful; embrace it.”
Michaela Coel
“The idea of wanting to do something that’s completely natural and then having to repress it is something that I find fascinating.”
Michaela Coel
“My generation of black British people often feels part American because of what we learned from TV.”
Michaela Coel