By: Chelsie Carvajal
There is a quiet grace in the way Phoebe Michaelides steps into the light.
Miss Cosmo England 2025 and a Miss World England finalist, she represents a new voice within pageantry — one that unites intellect with empathy. Statuesque at 179 cm, she carries herself with the calm assurance of someone who knows that presence is as much about intention as it is about stature. Her presence blends the refinement of the classic with the progressive spirit of the modern. At heart, she believes beauty is not a performance but an inner perception — an awareness that begins within and radiates outward. Where others may see crowns and sashes, Phoebe sees a platform for dialogue. Her mission is to remind audiences that purpose and intelligence can share a stage with beauty.
While pageantry is often associated with beauty and glamour, Phoebe’s involvement focuses on something different. For her, the stage is not a mirror for ego but a lens for understanding — a space to explore how compassion, intellect, and confidence can coexist in public life. Her approach challenges the stereotype that beauty and depth must exist apart, showing instead how one can illuminate the other.
The Mind Behind the Mirror

Phoebe’s background sets her apart in today’s competitions. She holds a degree in Nutrition and continues to expand her expertise with postgraduate training in Psychology. Her academic interests shape her public work, where she explores how emotional awareness and science can strengthen self-esteem. For Phoebe, each stage she steps onto feels less like a contest and more like a live study in confidence – both personal and collective.
She believes that psychological understanding belongs at the heart of conversations about beauty. With quiet curiosity, she speaks about comparison, resilience, and authenticity — reframing beauty as a reflection of emotional balance. In her words, “pageantry is not a mask, but a mirror — a reflection of what each woman chooses to express; the arena itself becomes as thoughtful, creative, or compassionate as the person within it.”
Her magazine project, Inner World, builds on that idea. The editorial space presents essays and reflections linking inner life with outer image. Readers are invited to consider self-worth beyond appearances — to see beauty as an ongoing dialogue between mind and body, and to raise awareness around eating disorders and the psychology of self-image.
From Loss to Purpose
Phoebe’s sense of purpose is rooted in the influence of her mother, who taught her that true elegance lies not only in appearance but in grace under pressure. When her mother’s life ended suddenly, she met it with remarkable composure and, in her final act of generosity, chose to donate her body to medical science — a gesture that embodied both courage and compassion. From her, Phoebe inherited a love of classic refinement and an unshakable strength that continues to guide her today. That moment deepened her mother’s lesson into something greater: a lifelong commitment to transform pain into purpose. Carrying her mother’s spirit forward has become central to her work — honouring the poise she embodied while fuelling it with the resilience and conviction born from loss.
Running marathons for charity helped Phoebe translate that philosophy into movement — transforming pain into progress, and endurance into empathy. Each mile became a gesture of care as much as strength, echoing her belief that resilience and compassion belong on equal ground.
Her award-winning play Through the Grapevine extends that philosophy into art. Informed by her background in psychology, it examines renewal and loss through storytelling — showing, rather than explaining, the ways people rebuild. Reimagining the ancient Greek tragic form in a modern setting, the piece has been noted for its emotional depth and its exploration of grief, transformation, and female autonomy, winning awards in London, Greece, and New York. Through her writing, she offers empathy to those navigating their own reinvention.
Her public speaking continues this thread. In her TEDx Talk, she examined self-perception and body image with a tone both scholarly and human — framing confidence as an inner conversation rather than an outer performance. Her speaking voice carries the composed warmth of someone who thinks before she speaks, yet it’s enlivened by a gentle humour that makes her insights feel both relatable and real. That balance of intellect, warmth, and emotional honesty allows her message to resonate across generations.
Pageantry with Purpose

Miss England, a pageant that values intellect and social purpose, has found in Phoebe a natural ambassador. With a foundation in nutrition and psychology, she advocates for a version of success measured not by aesthetics, but by substance. Guided by empathy, she champions collaboration over competition, presenting a broader and more human vision of what beauty can mean in the public eye.
As she prepares to represent England on the international stage at the prestigious Miss Cosmo International 2025 in Vietnam — a global event welcoming delegates from over 70 countries — Phoebe carries an atmosphere of calm purpose. She speaks of the intersection between culture, psychology, and growth — recognising that change does not need to shout to be heard. Even in movement there is gentle poise: a reminder that strength need not be loud to be felt. Her reflective manner and academic grounding help reframe an event traditionally associated with surface appeal.
In Phoebe Michaelides, England sends forward a representative of grace and progress — thoughtful, articulate, and quietly fearless. Her work reminds audiences that glamour can coexist with gentleness, and that true confidence begins where comparison ends. In her practice, science and stagecraft share a single aim: expressing beauty as awareness in motion.
Press Contact: hello@michaelides.studio
Instagram: @phoe_being
You can now vote for Phoebe directly through the Miss England mobile app











