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The 20 Best Lady Gaga Videos

From ‘Paparazzi’ and ‘Bad Romance’ to ‘John Wayne’ and ‘Disease’ — here are the stories behind some of the best Lady Gaga videos

Lady Gaga photo illustration

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY MATTHEW COOLEY. IMAGES IN ILLUSTRATION BY YOUTUBE.

Lady Gaga will go down in history as one of pop’s great visual auteurs. With every new era, she has delivered instantly iconic imagery, fashion statements and, of course, videos that have further amplified whatever sound or style she’s experimenting with at the current moment. Inspired by the daring imagery of Michael and Janet Jackson, Madonna and David Bowie, Gaga has taken advantage of every mode of changing technology available to build complex, forward-thinking universes in her music videos. For her 20 most memorable, thrilling videos, here are the stories behind how they were made as told by her collaborators.

“Applause”

You may have heard that Lady Gaga’s work draws heavily from fine art and fashion. Oh, you haven’t? Well, let the video for “Applause” remind you just how much she loves Warhol and Botticelli. Directed by fashion photography duo Inez and Vinoodh, “Applause” is Gaga’s attempt at bringing “iconography in motion” to her work, animating pivotal scenes from art history, film history, and her own career. That swan body, for instance, was inspired by an earlier photo shoot she did with Interview magazine. And according to Inez, that part where Gaga glides down the runway in purple, holding up her own leg like Jesus holding the cross, was drawn from the artist’s real-life hip injury that left her unable to perform for months. “She’ll do anything in this video to make her audience happy and give them inspiration,” Inez said. “We wanted to bring it back to a very basic element.”

“G.U.Y.”

Shot in Hearst Castle, Gaga’s directorial debut, the Artpop film “G.U.Y.,” is an epic work that features everything from cast members of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills to the resurrected “bodies” of Jesus, Michael Jackson, and Gandhi. Clocking in at nearly 12 minutes, the video features four songs from Artpop as Gaga embodies a Greek goddess, a broken bird, and a criminal mastermind. “There were so many scenes in that one shoot,” Efaw, who appears in the all-white dance scene, recalls. “I would go watch different ones as they were shooting. It was all going so fast and everything felt so elaborate and expensive.”“She wanted us to feel and look beautiful and fierce,” RHOBH star Kyle Richards told The Hollywood Reporter soon after the video’s release. “There was one scene where I kill a man. She was like, ‘I want you to whip that ponytail even more. Go back and really exaggerate your head-flipping.’ I was like, ‘Whatever you say.’ Even if I get whiplash, it’s OK. Lady Gaga told me to do it.”

“John Wayne”

One of a trilogy of music videos from her cowboy-inspired album Joanne, “John Wayne” sees Gaga reuniting with Jonas Akerlund for a rapid-fire, beer-swilling tale of outlaws and freaks causing mayhem on a country road. In just under three minutes, the Tarantino-esque video packs a huge amount of chaotic surprises, most notably when Gaga’s thigh-high boots start shooting bullets. “I think we shot it all in one day — that was a crazy day,” Akerlund tells Rolling Stone. Though not as well-known as “Paparazzi” or “Telephone,” “John Wayne” certainly stands out from the more subdued, sincere visuals of the Joanne era.

“Rain on Me”

If you grew up watching any of the Spy Kids movies, or The Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl in 3-D, then you’ll easily recognize the aesthetics of “Rain on Me.” It’s directed by Robert Rodriguez himself, who brought his love for giant CGI stadiums and cyberpunk to the Gaga universe. That would be a star-studded collaboration on its own, but then there’s Ariana Grande, who goes toe-to-toe with Gaga when it comes to sci-fi outfits, a cyborg dance squad, and Sailor Moon-worthy hair. “We wanted to keep with the style that [Grande is] comfortable with, while staying with the futuristic theme of the video,” said designer Laura Pulice, who created the latex costumes for the video.

‘911’

“911” came with a freaky short film that seemed like a departure from the intergalactic feel of Chronatica.For “911,” Gaga pulled inspiration from Sergei Parajanov’s classic 1960s art film The Color of Pomegranates while switching between mystical looks reminiscent of artist Frida Kahlo. The visual follows a teal-haired Gaga in a dystopian dream filled with clips of pomegranates in the sand and a man slamming his head into the ground that mirror the Armenian film. It ends with a back-to-reality scene of Gaga after a car crash.The video is meant to play as an allegory of Gaga’s pain. “This short film is very personal to me, my experience with mental health and the way reality and dreams can interconnect to form heroes within us and all around us,” she said on Instagram at the time. “Something that was once my real life everyday [sic] is now a film, a true story that is now the past and not the present. It’s the poetry of pain.”

‘Disease’

In “Disease,” Gaga’s biggest enemy is herself, a few times over. She faces a host of scary, horror film-level villains that she plays in a variety of trippy scenes. Directed by Tanu Muino, the “Disease” video kicks off with Gaga in a suburban enclave bruised and bloodied on top of a car. Behind the wheel is masked version of Gaga with one red eye. In other scenes, a chained gaga is walking all over a different version of Gaga. All Gagas are in battle with one another and torn up from the experience, until we finally see two of them embrace in the street.“I think a lot about the relationship I have with my own inner demons,” she said of the song and video upon releasing them. “It’s never been easy for me to face how I get seduced by chaos and turmoil. It makes me feel claustrophobic. ‘Disease’ is about facing that fear, facing myself and my inner darkness, and realizing that sometimes I can’t win or escape the parts of myself that scare me.”

‘Abracadabra’

“Abracadabra” saw Gaga return to the dark themes and pristine choreography of her early eras. The video (which premiered during the 2025 Grammys) opens by capturing a sinister Gaga dressed as “the lady in red,” wearing spike-covered latex as she declares: “The category is dance or die.”The video features more than two dozen dancers, including ballroom icon Honey Balenciaga, following classic Mother Monster moves. “Abracadabra” spawned its own TikTok dance trend and captures Gaga switching between extravagant outfits and choreo that transported fans back to The Fame Monster days.“There’s this dance battle that’s led by the light and the dark sides of me,” she told Elle UK. “I can’t initiate or receive the challenge without my community and the community is so strong.”