Gaga's second studio album Born This Way (2011) released the music video for the eponymous lead single, in which she gives birth to a new race. The music video won the Best Female Video and Best Video with a Social Message awards at the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards.[5] In the following video, "Judas", she portrays Mary Magdalene, and Norman Reedus plays the title role. The video for "The Edge of Glory" consists mostly of interchanging shots of Gaga dancing and singing on the street and was considered the simplest of her career.[6] In the same year, she released "You and I", which focuses on her trying to get her boyfriend back in Nebraska. She also introduces her male alter ego Jo Calderone in the video. Gaga directed her 14-minute video for the final single "Marry the Night", which narrates her story to find success in the music industry, but she ultimately suffers setback.
In 2013, Gaga released her third album Artpop, with "Applause" as its lead single, whose music video includes artistic and complex scenes. The 11-minute video for "G.U.Y." was filmed at the Hearst Castle, and features cameos from Andy Cohen and The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills stars. In 2014, Gaga released a jazz album with Tony Bennett called Cheek to Cheek, which generated four studio videos showing the album's recording process. In 2015, she released the music video for "Til It Happens to You", a song about campus rape in the United States. Her fifth studio album, Joanne, was released in 2016, and the music video for its lead single, "Perfect Illusion", was shot in the desert with a story that continues in her subsequent videos "Million Reasons", "John Wayne", and "Joanne". Gaga's sixth studio album Chromatica (2020) spawned the music video for the lead single "Stupid Love", followed by "Rain on Me", which features Ariana Grande. She also released a short film for "911", which focuses on a variety of surreal hallucination she has after getting involved in a serious car accident. As part of Love for Sale's (2021) promotion, Gaga and Bennett released many studio videos shot during recording sessions of each song.
The video begins with Gaga and her dancers arriving at an already ended house party, and starts playing the song prompting the asleep party-goers to wake up and start dancing to the music. The video features Gaga in her early fashion and incorporation of David Bowie's Ziggy Stardust character, her primary inspiration. Akon and Space Cowboy make cameos.
Shot in a mansion, the music video has two versions, one intercut with clips from the ABC channel's TV series Dirty Sexy Money and the other without them. Gaga and her dancers walk and dance through various parts of the building, while also burning money. Matsoukas employed heavy use of frontal lighting and low camera angles.
Filmed in a luxury villa sponsored by Bwin, the music video portrays Gaga's fashion adopted for The Fame (2008) era and her ideas behind pop culture. It shows Gaga coming out of a pool in a mirror masquerade mask and a black full-body leotard. She then attends a party and plays strip poker. The imagery used in "Poker Face" shows futuristic science-fiction stylings and Gaga provoking the men to strip at the poker game rather than herself.
The video is a remake of the original version by Peter Gabriel and Kate Bush, and features Gaga and Ferraro singing the song, all the while remaining in an embrace with each other.
The Italian-American 1950s-inspired music video was shot back-to-back with the video for "LoveGame" at Little Italy. A contrast from her earlier releases, "Eh, Eh" finds Gaga and her friends roaming around the streets of an Italian neighborhood; Gaga riding a Vespa and also singing the song while at home with her boyfriend. The visuals portray stereotypical male personas like mustached chefs and macho men in wife beaters.
Inspired by the New York underground, the music video portrays Gaga dancing at an underground subway station and in a parking lot. It is a tribute from the singer to the New York lifestyle, including its glamour, fans and fashion. The video takes several influences from Michael Jackson's "Bad" music video, which also took place in a subway station.
The music video features Wale and Gaga at the District of Columbia's Cardozo Senior High School and Wale in various venues and streets in the District. In the United States, the video was added to BET's TV rotation.
The music video portrays Gaga as a doomed starlet, who is followed by photographers everywhere. She is almost killed by her boyfriend, but survives and poisons him to revenge herself. It finishes with Gaga being arrested. Gaga's inspirations for the video ranged from classic films and fashion photography, while the visuals portray dead models, newspaper reports for the plot, as well as a number of encoded meanings.
The video features Gaga inside a surreal white bathhouse. There, she gets kidnapped by a group of supermodels who drug her and sell her to the Russian mafia for sexual slavery. The music video ends with Gaga killing the man who bought her by setting him on fire.
The music video is a continuation of the plot from the "Paparazzi" video and was shot as a short film. After Gaga gets bailed out of prison by Beyoncé, they go to a diner to get revenge on Beyoncé's boyfriend, but accidentally end up killing all the guests having breakfast. Upon escape from the crime scene, the two end up in a high-speed police chase. The video referenced Quentin Tarantino's films Kill Bill: Volume 1 (2003) and Pulp Fiction (1994).
Inspired by Gaga's love for the gay community, the video showed the singer dancing with a group of soldiers in a cabaret, interspersed with scenes of Gaga as a nun swallowing a rosary and near-naked men holding machine guns. Critics complimented its idea and dark nature while the Catholic League criticized Gaga for blasphemy.
Inspired by painters like Salvador Dalí and Francis Bacon and their surrealistic images, Gaga is depicted as giving birth to a new human race free of prejudice during the video's prologue. The scenes alternate between various dance sequences and Gaga singing on a throne in space.
A simple video in contrast to much of Gaga's previous work, it portrays her dancing on an apartment building's fire escape and walking on a lonely street in New York City. Differences to Gaga's previous videos include the lack of intricate choreography and back-up dancers, as well as using only one outfit, which was designed by Versace. Aside from Gaga herself, Clarence Clemons is the only other person to appear in the video.
The video features shots of Timberlake and Andy Samberg singing around town. Timberlake tells his plan to have a sexual encounter with a girl he met, while Samberg reveals a similar plan. They both meet outside of Gaga's apartment, where it is revealed that both of them met the same girl, without each other knowing. Gaga explains that she invited them both so that they could have a threesome, which they agree to do, citing "the golden rule". The music video aired as part of the SNL Digital Short series.
Shot in Springfield, Nebraska, the video features Jo Calderone, Gaga's male alter ego, and Yüyi, her mermaid alter ego. The main concept behind the video is Gaga's journey to be with her beloved one, a mad scientist, portrayed by Taylor Kinney.
Filmed in New York City, it tells the story of Gaga getting signed by her record label Interscope Records after being dropped from her former label, Def Jam Recordings. Alternates between scenes in a clinic, a dance studio, her own New York apartment and on a car's rooftop at a parking lot.
The video draws inspiration from the arts, including Sandro Botticelli's Birth of Venus, Andy Warhol's depiction of Marilyn Monroe and John Galliano's fall 2009 fashion show. Alternating between color and black-and-white, it shows artistic and complex scenes such as Gaga's head on a swan, a scene in a bird cage, and the singer seated in a large top hat. Gaga also wears hand-shaped lingerie and a seashell bra with matching shell bikini. Near the climax, the singer features in a violet, crystal-like scene, and at the end, the name of her album Artpop (2013) is spelled using hand gestures.
The music video was shot at Hearst Castle, near San Simeon, California. The video featured reality television show actors like The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, and art works of artist Nathan Sawaya and YouTube's Minecraft entertainer SkyDoesMinecraft. Running for over eleven minutes, the video shows Gaga as a fallen and wounded angel, who is revived by her followers in a pool. Once rejuvenated, she takes revenge on the men who hunted her and replaces them with clones known as G.U.Y.
Shot in black-and-white for the 2015 documentary film The Hunting Ground, and part of a public service announcement video, it depicts various instances of violence against women, as well as sexual assaults. It ends with a cautionary note on their effects, and the victims finding solace with their close friends and relatives. Gaga is not featured in the video.
A continuation from the music video for "Perfect Illusion", it shows Gaga being picked up from the desert by her friends and workmates. Afterwards, she goes into a studio to film a music video for the song.
A continuation from the music video for "Million Reasons", it features Gaga riding a horse and getting involved in a dangerous motorcycle chase. The video intercuts with scenes of Gaga dancing under neon lights and gun shoots.
The video depicts Gaga playing instruments and walking outdoors in a backyard, along with images of her at a bar with friends. The clip is a mixture of black and white and colored scenes.
The video is composed of various clips from Gaga's film A Star Is Born (2018). Gaga's character, Ally, and Jackson Maine, played by Bradley Cooper, perform the song for the first time at a sold-out venue.
The video is composed of various clips from A Star Is Born (2018). Features Gaga's character singing a tribute to her late husband Jackson (played by Bradley Cooper).
The video is composed of various clips from A Star Is Born (2018). Features Gaga's character going onstage to sing the song, introduced by Bradley Cooper's character Jackson. A vertical video was also released to Spotify.
The main concept of the video is bringing different kinds of people together under music and dance. It is represented with separate groups of dancers, each forming a unique tribe with a corresponding color and logo.
The video continues the story of Chromatica (2020) and the dual mirror worlds with which Gaga and Grande's characters exist. It ends with a shot of the two singers hugging each other.
Heavily inspired by Sergei Parajanov's The Color of Pomegranates (1969), the video reveals to be an elaborate hallucination, as Gaga suddenly snaps back into reality in an ambulance after being involved in a serious car accident. It also features "Chromatica II" and "Chromatica III".
Directed by Top Gun: Maverick's (2022) director, Joseph Kosinski, it shows Gaga singing under a jet, while playing a piano on a plane runway. The video is spliced with scenes of the film as well. It ends with Gaga belting the lyrics as jets take off.
It shows the duo performing the song on a retro stage of a television studio set, populated by faceless mannequins, as a black-and-white camera records them.
Contains the concert television special featuring live performances by Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga, originally filmed on July 28, 2014, and aired on PBS on October 24, 2014.
The commercial premiered during her appearance on Saturday Night Live, featuring Gaga running over the Brooklyn Bridge, rehearsing her dancing, and interacting with her fans over the internet.
The video features Gaga scratching off black ooze, representing her black eau de parfum, from the male model's face. At the end of the commercial, Lady Gaga's "Gulliver pose" is transformed into a golden statue similar to the cap of the bottle.
Used to promote O2's app music, which customers would listen to Artpop (2013) six days earlier its official release date. It features Gaga in many shots in a big blue balloon room.
Used to promote the European leg of ArtRave: The Artpop Ball, it begins with a giant silver balloon explodes from which Gaga emerges. Then she starts walking to the front of the arena while the music and cheers get louder.
Gaga and Tony Bennett feature in the bookstore chain's holiday television ad, where they walk the aisles of a Barnes & Noble store while looking for a gift for each other.
In a long, brightly lit hallway stands Gaga who speaks about creating something different with Intel, which would be revealed at the 58th Annual Grammy Awards.
In partnership with DonorsChoose.org and Born This Way Foundation, Gaga plays a substitute teacher and asks students what they want to be in the future in the video.
Serving as the launch video, Gaga encourages the embrace of individuality and expressing it through bold makeup and body art with her collection of makeup. The campaign is titled "Our Haus. Your Rules".
For the Voce Viva fragrance's campaign, titled "My Voice, My Strength", Gaga appears in a red dress in natural landscapes, with the images being interspersed with people of various ethnicities doing the performances, representing the world union.
Titled "The Queendom", it shows Gaga holding a giant champagne bottle, making moves while blending with the background in swirling patterns of movement, before joining a group of others for a toast.
Screen Actors Guild Awards: Nordyke, Kimberly (December 12, 2018). "SAG Awards: Full List of Nominations". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on December 12, 2018. Retrieved December 12, 2018.
^Talese, Gay (September 19, 2011). "Tony Bennett in the studio". The New Yorker. Archived from the original on March 20, 2015. Retrieved October 3, 2011.