You know something is happening when a single image launches a news cycle.
In March, Lady Gaga posted a photo on her Instagram. In it, she and Adam Driver are posing in front of a beautiful, snowy, mountainous landscape. They’re dressed in luxury aprés-ski wear, the kind of attire one might imagine elegant, old-money Europeans would wear during a trip to the Alps. Gaga is especially stunning, dripping in gold and pearl jewelry and wearing a furry white hat.
Lady Gaga is now a full-blown movie star, a true triple threat.
“Signore e Signora Gucci #HouseOfGucci,” read the caption. This was the first still from Driver and Gaga’s film “House of Gucci,” helmed by director Ridley Scott.
Cast Adam Driver and Lady Gaga in a 1980s-set heist movie about a couple of con artists who swindle an entire Alpine ski resort (and also sing and fall in love), you cowards pic.twitter.com/yf0siUUJZF
— Ashley Spencer (@AshleyySpencer) March 9, 2021
The internet responded in kind. Fans tweeted about how “iconic” the photo was. Vogue ran an entire article titled “17 Thoughts I Had About Lady Gaga And Adam Driver’s Gucci Transformation.” It was so instantly iconic that my boyfriend and I were barraged by texts from friends joking that we looked like the in-costume coupling, and we decided we would be dressing up as the still for Halloween — months before we even bothered to look up the plot of the film.
We did not, for example, realize that Lady Gaga’s character, Patrizia Reggiani, was famous precisely because she was convicted of orchestrating a plot to have her husband, Driver’s fashion magnate Maurizio Gucci, murdered by a hitman in 1995.
The photograph also signaled something that had been building for years, which had been clear since “A Star Is Born” came out in 2018: Lady Gaga is now a full-blown movie star, a true triple threat.
She has successfully remade herself with the sort of highbrow Hollywood appeal that is hard to achieve when you are a pop artist who famously wore a meat dress to the 2010 Video Music Awards. (Not to knock the meat dress — it, too, is iconic in its own right.)
“House of Gucci” marks the next step in Gaga’s public evolution; it effectively collapses the space between Lady Gaga the pop star and Lady Gaga the movie star. Gaga does not need a project to be prestigious or universally beloved to validate her ambitions. Hers is a brand built on the very notion of iconic-ness itself. Whether or not “House of Gucci” is a runaway success, it will not change that fact.
The role of Reggiani, an ambitious working-class woman who marries a Gucci scion and ultimately becomes his downfall, has all the drama that marked Gaga’s rise to fame and made her so beloved, and at least some of the acting prestige of “A Star Is Born.” She’s allowed to fully vamp, leaning into the campiness of playing a woman scorned, while mining her own trauma to ground her performance in reality.
“I took the pain I feel from being attacked when I was a young girl, from feeling left behind by people that I love, from feeling trapped that I can’t go out into a world that I love,” Gaga told The Hollywood Reporter. “I took that pain and I gave it to [Reggiani].”







