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It’s Time to Rewatch Lady Gaga’s Most Iconic Music Videos

Story Center by Story Center
September 26, 2025
Reading Time: 11 mins read
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When Lady Gaga first emerged onto the scene with her 2008 hit “Just Dance,” it was immediately clear that she wasn’t just another pop star—she was a cultural disruptor in the making. Her rise was marked by chart-dominating anthems and innovative fashion choices, but it was her boundary-breaking visuals that truly set the tone for her status as a pop icon in the making. From the start, Lady Gaga’s unique artistry was best encapsulated through her music videos that were mini pop operas in their own right, complete with avant-garde fashion, campy theatrics, and game-changing choreography. Whether she was strutting in McQueen or spinning full-on cinematic universes, Gaga turned the music video into her own theatrical playground.

From the instantly iconic “Bad Romance” music video to her “Telephone” short film with Beyoncé to her most recent collab with Tim Burton for “The Dead Dance,” Gaga’s videography is a masterclass in how to fuse pop stardom with high art. Ahead, a look back at the singer’s most iconic music videos of all time that are always worth re-watching.

“Poker Face” (2008)

An early hit, this was the music video that helped establish Lady Gaga as an avant-garde artist, especially with its unique outfit choices: the bleach blonde bangs, the bow made out of her own hair, and that metallic disco mask. And emerging from a pool in a leotard between two regal Great Danes is one of the greatest music video entrances we’ve ever seen.

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“Bad Romance” (2009)

With over 1.9 billion views to date, “Bad Romance” is Gaga’s most viewed music video on YouTube, and it’s obvious why. It boasts an iconic dance sequence (which we all tried to mimic at least once) and an incredible wardrobe by Alexander McQueen, featuring those one-of-a-kind armadillo shoes that Gaga helped make famous.

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“Paparazzi” (2009)

This 7-minute feature is more a mini movie rather than a music video, starring True Blood’s Alexander Skarsgård. It features an elaborate performance about love and revenge in a luxurious mansion, but her use of crutches and a wheelchair as props caused an outcry by the disabled community. Gaga later defended the decision, saying it was a metaphor of what artists will do to “fame-whore themselves.”

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“LoveGame” (2009)

Gaga gives an underground tribute to New York City as she and her crew dance through subways and parking garages clad in denim, leather, and studs. The video is directed by Joseph Kahn, who’s also worked with Taylor Swift and Britney Spears for her “Toxic” video. Similarly, Gaga rolls around in nearly-nude sparkles here, too.

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“Alejandro” (2010)

“Alejandro” was highly criticized for being anti-religious and overtly sexual, but it’s the controversial (and bizarre) aspects that make it hard to forget. If you look closely, you’ll find some Madonna influences, which some read as a complete rip-off, especially with the machine gun bra meant to resemble Madge’s cone bustier. Despite its controversial imagery, director Stephen Klein said the video is about “a woman’s desire to resurrect a dead love, and who cannot face the brutality of her present situation.”

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“Telephone” (2010)

What happens when you put two queens together on a hit song? You get an epic nine and a half minute music video with unforgettable costumes, a dance routine that everyone wants to learn, and a badass plot that rivals Orange Is the New Black. Gaga and Beyoncé make the perfect duo in this vid.

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“Born This Way” (2011)

Written by Gaga herself and directed by fashion photographer Nick Knight, the video for this self-empowering song takes an extraterrestrial note with a kaleidoscopic alien birth at the intro that only Mother Monster could’ve thought of. “Zombie boy” model Rick Genest and some very sharp prosthetic cheekbones also make an appearance.

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“Edge of Glory” (2011)

Set on a foggy city sidewalk and fire escape, this is one of Gaga’s more minimalistic videos. She appears alone with legendary saxophonist Clarence Clemons from the E Street Band, and dances solo as he plays on a stoop. Unfortunately, Clemons passed away shortly after the video was released. But when he was still suffering from his stroke a few days prior, Gaga gathered her fans to pay a tribute to the musician through tweets and videos.

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“Yoü and I” (2011)

The singer continues her penchant for multi-narrative videos with this one, which guest stars her former fiancé, Taylor Kinney, as her love interest. She plays a disheveled diva on a dirt road, a ghost bride, a mermaid in a bathtub, a barefoot beauty in a cornfield, and her own male suitor, just to name a few.

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“Marry the Night” (2011)

Gaga directed this music video herself for a more “autobiographical” take on her music, she told Vanity Fair in 2011. The scenes recount her struggles as an artist, including the moment she was dropped by her first record label, Island Def Jam. Fun fact: the nurses in the psychiatric ward scene are wearing Calvin Klein uniforms and Saint Laurent shoes.

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“Judas” 2011

Delivering yet another iconic “Born This Way” era music video, Gaga tapped The Walking Dead actor Norman Reedus to star as Judas as she took on the role of Mary Magdalene in this modern take on the story of Judas betraying Jesus. In Gaga’s version, the disciples are a biker gang (naturally) whose story ends at the “Electric Chapel.” There are McQueen and Mugler-clad looks, top-notch choreography, and the dramatic cinema Gaga had become synonymous with by this point in her career. Directed by Gaga and choreographer Laurie-Ann Gibson, “Judas” ended with a dramatic fate for the singer and another legendary video to add to her robust catalog.

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“Applause” (2013)

The introductory video to ARTPOP was a fitting reflection to the rest of the album, which represented Gaga’s new take on her music. The images don’t fall short of her usual strangeness and shock factor, but it seems a bit more elegant and artistic than her fans had seen prior. Some say that she references famous moments in art history, with one example being the tribute to Botticelli’s “Birth of Venus” with the shell bra outfit.

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“G.U.Y. (an Artpop Film)” (2014)

Featuring the cast of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills and the Hearst Castle as its stunning backdrop, the “G.U.Y.” music video is another Gaga-directed masterpiece. The nearly 12-minute-long video chronicles Gaga as an injured bird, a Greek goddess, and a crime boss of sorts in a storyline that’s complete with A+ choreography, a band made up of Beverly Hills housewives (hello, Lisa Vanderpump, Yolanda Foster, and Kyle and Kim Richards), and an array of head-to-toe designer looks. What more could you ask for?

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“Til It Happens To You” (2015)

Perhaps her most moving and emotional music video to date, the song featured in The Hunting Ground documentary relays the story of sexual assault and abuse on college campuses. Gaga herself doesn’t star in the video, which instead features students on college campuses across the country. The clip is reminiscent of her emotional performance at the 2016 Oscars, where real-life survivors joined her onstage.

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“Rain On Me” featuring Ariana Grande (2020)

One of the few pop culture highlights of the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic? The release of Lady Gaga and Ariana Grande’s music video for their collaborative song, “Rain on Me.” The video from Gaga’s Chromatica era features the two pop stars having a good old-fashioned dance duel before hugging it out in the end. It was exactly the kind of joyous poppy fun we all needed at the time.

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“911” (2020)

One thing about Gaga? She’s going to give you a cinematic short film. The visuals for “911” served as the ultimate reminder of that during its 2020 release. Drawing inspiration from Sergei Parajanov’s 1969 film The Color of Pomegranates, the video places Gaga in a surreal desert landscape in an array of over-the-top designer looks, from scenes draped in archival Alexander McQueen to ornate headdresses and jewel-encrusted costumes, as she reimagines the Armenian film through her own avant-garde lens.

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“Disease” (2024)

In “Disease,” Lady Gaga brings her spookiest and goriest antics to a picture-perfect suburban neighborhood. Directed by Tanu Muino, the video for the first single off her Mayhem album stages a blood-soaked showdown between multiple incarnations of Gaga, each battling for dominance in a twisted, horror film-inspired spectacle set against a deceptively pristine backdrop. It’s quintessential Gaga in its finest form.

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“Abracadabra” (2025)

When Gaga released the “Abracadabra” video off her latest album, Mayhem, everyone collectively declared “Old Gaga is back!” It was impossible not to note all the references to arguably her most iconic videos, like “Bad Romance” and “Judas.” Theatrical group choreography? Check. Religious-inspired designer looks and headpieces? Check. A dramatic extended scream? Check. Gaga was so back.

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“The Dead Dance” (2025)

Directed by Tim Burton, Gaga’s “The Dead Dance” music video delivered chillingly haunting visuals to accompany the second season of Netflix’s Wednesday. The black-and-white video stars Gaga and her dancers as an army of creepy Victorian dolls with moves choreographed by Parris Goebel. The end result? A mix of high camp meets dark fantasy, the perfect mash-up of Burton’s cinematic creepiness and Gaga’s theatrical edge.

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Tags: Alexander McQueenLady Gagamusic videos
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