Victoria Clark
Victoria Clark (born October 10, 1959) is an American actress, singer, and director best known for her acclaimed performances in Broadway musicals, where she has earned two Tony Awards for Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical.[1][2] Born in Dallas, Texas, Clark studied music at Yale University, initially intending to pursue a career as a director before transitioning to acting.[3] Her early theater work included roles in productions such as Cats, building her reputation in musical theater.[4] Clark's career breakthrough arrived with her portrayal of Margaret Johnson, a mother grappling with her daughter's condition, in the 2005 Broadway production of The Light in the Piazza, for which she won the Tony Award, Drama Desk Award, and Outer Critics Circle Award.[3][2] She received Tony nominations for her roles as Marie in the 2013 revival of Cinderella and as Fraulein Schneider in the 1998 revival of Cabaret, showcasing her versatility in character-driven musical roles.[2] In 2023, Clark achieved further acclaim as Kimberly Levaco, a teenager with a rare genetic disorder, in Kimberly Akimbo, securing her second Tony Award along with Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle honors.[5][2] In 2025, she starred as Joan in the Broadway production of Punch.[6] Beyond Broadway, Clark has maintained a multifaceted career, appearing in films like The Happening (2008) directed by M. Night Shyamalan and television series such as Homeland (2014), where she played Ellen Mathison.[3] She is also a Grammy Award-nominated artist and has performed in concerts with orchestras including the Boston Symphony Orchestra.[4] As an educator and director, Clark mentors actors and singers across generations, emphasizing vocal technique and performance artistry.[4]Early life and education
Early years
Victoria Clark was born on October 10, 1959, in Dallas, Texas.[7] She grew up as the youngest of three children in a supportive family environment. Her father, Banks Clark, was a mechanical engineer who owned his own company specializing in heating-and-cooling systems, while her mother, Lorraine, was a homemaker and the daughter of a Baptist minister.[7] Encouraged by her parents and grandmother, Clark began taking voice and piano lessons at the age of six, fostering an early passion for music that became a lifelong companion.[8] During her childhood in Dallas, Clark attended The Hockaday School, an all-girls institution where she participated in theatrical productions that ignited her interest in performance. Notably, in 1978, she appeared in a school staging of Mame as Auntie Mame, an experience that highlighted her emerging talents in acting and singing amid the vibrant local arts scene.[9][7] These formative activities, combined with her family's nurturing of musical pursuits, shaped her artistic inclinations before pursuing formal training.[8]Education
Victoria Clark attended Yale University, where she earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in music cum laude in 1982.[8] Her studies emphasized music and theater, with an initial focus on directing, during which she developed foundational skills in vocal technique through rigorous training in the music department and practical involvement in campus productions.[10] She starred in and directed several acclaimed shows for the Yale Gilbert & Sullivan Society, including leading roles that showcased her soprano voice and staging a Gilbert and Sullivan operetta as a sophomore, experiences that sharpened her theatrical instincts and exposed her to both sides of production.[10][11] These Yale engagements marked a turning point, as her performances drew attention from industry figures and prompted a reevaluation of her career aspirations. A pivotal realization came when casting director Ira Weitzman, having seen her in a student production, encouraged her to audition for acting roles, leading her to shift from directing toward performing despite her original plans.[10] After graduation, Clark enrolled in New York University's Graduate Musical Theater Writing Program as a stage director but departed after one year to capitalize on emerging acting prospects.[8] At age 16, she attended the Interlochen Summer Arts Camp musical theater program. She also studied opera at the American Institute of Musical Studies in Graz, Austria, and voice at The Mozarteum in Salzburg, Austria.[8] She supplemented her training with acting classes at Michael Howard Studios and voice training with Edward Sayegh, which refined her performance abilities and facilitated her entry into professional theater.[12]Stage career
Early stage work
Following her graduation from Yale University in 1982 with a degree in music, Victoria Clark initially pursued a career in stage directing after moving to New York City and enrolling in a graduate musical theater writing program at New York University.[13] While demonstrating a song for a class at NYU, she caught the attention of casting director Ira Weitzman, who encouraged her to audition for the chorus of the impending Broadway production of Stephen Sondheim's Sunday in the Park with George.[13] This marked her pivot to acting, as she secured a position as an understudy for Celeste #1, Celeste #2, and Frieda in the original 1984 Broadway production, though she never performed onstage during its run.[6] Her Broadway debut came in 1985 as a replacement understudy, providing her with foundational experience in a high-profile musical amid the competitive New York theater scene.[14] Transitioning to touring productions, Clark joined the first national tour of Cats in the mid-1980s as a replacement, performing in ensemble roles including Jellylorum and Griddlebone from 1985 to 1987.[15] This touring work allowed her to hone her skills in large-scale musicals while traveling across the United States, building stamina and versatility in ensemble dynamics essential for her developing career.[16] By 1987, she advanced to a named supporting role as Madame Thénardier in the first national tour of Les Misérables, which ran until 1991, where she also served as dance captain, responsible for maintaining choreography and integrating over 20 replacements. This position represented a key step from understudy and chorus duties to a character role, showcasing her vocal and comedic strengths in a demanding production.[17] In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Clark continued building credits through regional and developmental theater, including appearances at venues like the Goodspeed Opera House, where she performed in productions such as Splendora in 1990.[16] These experiences, influenced by her Yale training in musical performance, helped her navigate the challenges of inconsistent opportunities as a newcomer, often balancing auditions with occasional directing gigs from her pre-acting days.[13] Her early roles emphasized ensemble support and reliability, laying the groundwork for more prominent parts without immediate typecasting, as she diversified across musical theater styles.[18]Breakthrough and major roles
Victoria Clark's breakthrough came with her portrayal of Margaret Johnson in the 2005 Broadway production of The Light in the Piazza, a role she helped shape through extensive involvement in the show's development workshops and out-of-town tryouts.[19] As the unhappy wife of an American businessman and devoted mother to her intellectually challenged daughter Clara, Margaret embarks on a transformative journey in Florence, grappling with themes of love, regret, and second chances amid her strained marriage.[13] Clark's preparation drew on her directorial background, allowing her to infuse the character with layered emotional depth—portraying Margaret as a restrained yet fiercely protective woman whose inner turmoil emerges through subtle expressions and soaring vocals in Adam Guettel's score.[20] Her performance earned universal acclaim for its poignancy and authenticity, with critics praising how Clark brought grace and truth to Margaret's emotional arc, making the role a standout in the season's musical theater.[21] This triumph culminated in Clark's first Tony Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical at the 59th Annual Tony Awards, marking a pivotal shift in her career from character actress to bona fide star. The role solidified her reputation for embodying complex maternal figures with vulnerability and strength, opening doors to more prominent leading parts and highlighting her versatility in intimate, character-driven musicals. Building on this success, Clark took on the whimsical yet demanding role of the Fairy Godmother in the 2013 Broadway revival of Rodgers & Hammerstein's Cinderella, where she delivered a warm, humorous performance filled with physical acrobatics, including aerial rigging sequences.[22] Her vocal prowess shone in ensemble numbers and duets like "Impossible/It's Possible," navigating the score's mix of lyrical ballads and upbeat patter with a bright soprano that conveyed both enchantment and maternal wisdom, though the role's high-energy demands tested her stamina across eight shows a week.[23] Reviews lauded her as a "lovely and warm" presence who infused the fairy tale with humanity and irreverence.[24] In 2015, Clark portrayed Mamita, Gigi's loving grandmother, in the Broadway revival of Gigi, a role that showcased her ability to blend tenderness with wry sophistication in a score demanding precise diction and emotional range.[25] Her standout solo "Say a Prayer for Me" highlighted her strong, expressive voice, delivering Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe's melodies with heartfelt clarity and subtle humor that grounded the character's protective instincts.[26] Critics noted her "wonderfully warm and real" interpretation, which provided emotional anchor amid the production's lighter romantic elements.[27] These roles illustrate the evolution of Clark's acting style, emphasizing her growing versatility in musical theater by transitioning from the introspective depth of dramatic leads like Margaret to the exuberant, multifaceted characterizations in fairy-tale and period pieces, all while maintaining a signature warmth that connects viscerally with audiences.[28]Recent Broadway productions
In 2022, Victoria Clark took on the lead role of Kimberly Levaco in the Broadway musical Kimberly Akimbo, a heartfelt story adapted from David Lindsay-Abaire's play about a New Jersey teenager afflicted with a fictional rapid-aging disease that causes her body to mature four times faster than normal, leaving her with the physical appearance and health challenges of someone much older while retaining a youthful spirit.[5][14] Clark, then in her early 60s, portrayed the 16-year-old protagonist with a nuanced blend of vulnerability and resilience, integrating the character's plot arc of navigating family dysfunction, budding romance, and existential fears into performances that highlighted themes of fleeting time and inner vitality. To embody Kimberly's dual nature, the production employed subtle wig and makeup designs by J. Jared Janas that evolved to reflect the disease's progression, allowing Clark to convey the contrast between her character's adolescent mindset and accelerating physical decline without relying on heavy prosthetics.[29][30] The role demanded a profound physical and emotional transformation from Clark, who drew on personal reflections about rediscovering her "inner adolescent" through movement and vocal techniques to capture Kimberly's quirky optimism amid terminal illness, resulting in a performance that resonated deeply with audiences for its authenticity and humor.[31][32] Kimberly Akimbo premiered at the Booth Theatre on November 10, 2022, and ran for 612 performances until April 28, 2024, earning widespread acclaim for Clark's portrayal, with critics praising its emotional depth and her ability to infuse the character with "heartfelt and touching" humanity that turned personal tragedy into a celebration of living fully.[33] For her work, Clark won her second Tony Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical on June 11, 2023, recognizing the role's poignant exploration of mortality and joy, which she described as a career-defining opportunity to embrace imperfection in her singing and acting.[34][35] Following the success of Kimberly Akimbo, Clark returned to Broadway in 2025 as Joan (doubling with Nan) in James Graham's play Punch at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre, a tense drama inspired by real events surrounding a 2016 hammer attack in London, where she portrayed the compassionate mother of a murder victim grappling with grief, forgiveness, and the complexities of justice.[36][37] The limited engagement, directed by Adam Penford, opened on September 29, 2025, and closed on November 2, 2025, with Clark's performance noted for its emotional intensity and subtlety in conveying layered maternal responses to tragedy.[38][39] Clark's recent Broadway work underscores her enduring adaptability and relevance in the theater, particularly in roles that confront aging and human fragility; in interviews, she has reflected on how portraying characters like Kimberly allowed her to challenge ageist stereotypes in musical theater, affirming her continued presence as a versatile leading actress into her mid-60s.[40][41]Screen and media career
Film roles
Victoria Clark's transition to film has been marked by selective roles that leverage her theatrical versatility, often portraying nuanced, character-driven women in independent and ensemble features. Her screen debut came in animated projects, where her soprano vocal range from Broadway found a natural outlet. In Disney's The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996), she provided additional voices, contributing to the film's choral elements and ensemble dynamics.[42] This was followed by ensemble and character vocals in the animated musical Anastasia (1997), where her singing enhanced the film's operatic sequences alongside stars like John Cusack and Meg Ryan. Clark's first live-action role arrived in Tim Robbins' Cradle Will Rock (1999), a historical drama about the 1930s Federal Theatre Project. She played Dulce Fox, a performer in the controversial production, embodying the era's artistic defiance and labor struggles in a cast featuring John Turturro and Bill Murray. This performance drew on her stage experience to infuse the character with authentic theatrical fervor, bridging her live-performance roots with cinema. In the 2000s, Clark appeared in higher-profile films while maintaining a focus on independent cinema. She portrayed the Nursery Owner's Wife in M. Night Shyamalan's thriller The Happening (2008), a brief but memorable role amid the film's ecological horror, sharing scenes with Mark Wahlberg and Zooey Deschanel. Her stage-honed emotional depth added subtle layers to the character's quiet terror. Subsequent roles included Madeline Pikler in the family drama Tickling Leo (2009), where she depicted a Holocaust survivor's wife navigating generational trauma, collaborating with director Andrew Keenan-Bolger. The early 2010s saw Clark in supporting parts across indie features, showcasing her range in everyday American stories. In Harvest (2010), she played Anna Monopoli, a resilient farm wife in a tale of rural economic hardship, directed by Richard Loncraine. That same year, as Miriam in Main Street (2010), she contributed to an ensemble exploring small-town revitalization, opposite Colin Firth and Patricia Clarkson. Her comedic timing shone as the Teacher in the mockumentary National Lampoon's Dirty Movie (2011), a satirical take on sex education films. Clark's film work in the 2010s also included shorter formats, such as the lead in the experimental short Archaeology of a Woman (2012), where she portrayed a multifaceted female figure through layered monologues, highlighting her solo performance skills akin to stage soliloquies. In the 2020s, she starred as the eccentric Shirley in Wanderland (2018), an indie dramedy about self-discovery on Long Island. Directed by Hanna Slak, Clark's portrayal of the free-spirited farmer provided emotional anchor to Tate Ellington's lost protagonist, earning praise for its heartfelt eccentricity. Through these roles, Clark has complemented her stage persona with intimate, voice-inflected screen presences, often in projects emphasizing human resilience and quirkiness up to 2025.Television appearances
Victoria Clark's television career began with guest appearances in popular procedural series during the late 1990s and early 2000s. In 1998, she played a detective in the "Law & Order" episode "Bait," marking her early foray into episodic drama.[43] She followed this with a role as Margaret Melia, a mother involved in a custody dispute, in the 2003 "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" episode "Choice." These roles highlighted her ability to portray complex supporting characters in fast-paced legal and crime narratives.[10] In the mid-2000s and 2010s, Clark continued with guest spots that showcased her versatility in both medical and espionage genres. She appeared as Mrs. Simanski in the 2009 "Mercy" episode "You Lost Me with the Cinderblock," depicting a patient facing personal tragedy.[44] Her performance as Ellen Mathison, the estranged mother of CIA officer Carrie Mathison, in a 2014 episode of "Homeland" brought emotional depth to family dynamics amid high-stakes intrigue.[45] In 2016, she guest-starred as Shannon Janderman in "The Good Wife," contributing to the show's exploration of legal ethics.[8] Clark's television presence expanded in the late 2010s and early 2020s with more prominent and recurring roles across diverse series. She portrayed Diane Doyle, the supportive mother in a non-traditional family, in a recurring capacity on Fox's "Almost Family" from 2019 to 2020.[46] Notable one-off appearances included Queen Gabriella in the 2020 Hallmark holiday special "One Royal Holiday," where she embodied regal warmth.[47] That same year, she appeared in "Little America" as Tracy, contributing to an anthology of immigrant stories. Additional guest roles featured her as Adult Jenny Quinn in the 2018 miniseries "The Truth About the Harry Quebert Affair," Vanessa in "Pose" (2021), and Mrs. French in two episodes of "The Blacklist" (2021). She also guest-starred as Deborah Jordan in the 2025 episode "Tearjerker" of "Elsbeth."[3] In 2025, Clark joined the cast of HBO's "The Gilded Age" in its third season as Joan Carlton, a kind and genial blue-blood socialite from New York's old money elite.[48] Her character, sincere and supportive toward her son Billy Carlton, integrates into the season's plotlines exploring class tensions and family loyalties in late 19th-century New York society, appearing in multiple episodes.[49] This role underscores her continued diversification into prestige period drama.[8]Directing and teaching
Directorial projects
Victoria Clark began her directing career in the late 1980s after graduating from Yale University, while in graduate school at New York University, receiving early offers to helm productions for regional opera companies.[50][10] She served as Director of the Residency Troupe at Texas Opera Theater, where she directed and choreographed eight productions blending opera and musical theater, marking her initial foray into professional stage direction.[50][10] In the 2000s, Clark expanded her regional theater work, directing for institutions such as Philadelphia Opera, Chautauqua Opera, Goodspeed Opera House, and the 92nd Street Y, often focusing on character-driven narratives in musical and operatic contexts. These projects honed her approach to intimate storytelling, emphasizing emotional depth and performer collaboration over spectacle.[8][1][47] Her first major workshop credit came in 2016 with Newton's Cradle, a new musical she directed at the New York Musical Theatre Festival, earning the Best Director Award for its innovative exploration of family dynamics and loss. This production showcased her vision for emerging musicals, collaborating closely with writers to refine character arcs through precise staging. In 2017, she directed The Trouble with Doug, a musical with music by Will Aronson and book by Daniel Maté, at Fredericia Teater in Denmark, adapting the intimate comedy for an international audience while preserving its focus on relational tensions.[51][52][53][50] Clark continued building her directorial portfolio in the late 2010s with character-centric works. In 2018, she helmed the premiere of Scaffolding, a musical by Jeff Blumenkrantz featuring Rebecca Luker, at the Barrow Group's Premieres! series, highlighting her affinity for new material that delves into personal resilience and artistic ambition. The following year, she directed August Strindberg's The Dance of Death at Classic Stage Company, delivering a taut, psychologically intense production that underscored marital strife through minimalist design and actor-driven tension; she also co-directed an industry presentation of the new musical Hansel & Gretl & Heidi & Günter with Jerry Dixon, fostering development for this whimsical yet poignant family tale.[53][4][54] Entering the 2020s, Clark adapted to virtual formats amid the pandemic, directing the segment “Come to Jesus” for MasterVoices' online production of Adam Guettel's Myths and Hymns in 2020, which captured spiritual introspection through innovative digital staging. In 2014, during her artist-in-residence tenure, she directed a staging of The Light in the Piazza at Pace University, bringing her nuanced approach to Adam Guettel and Craig Lucas's lyrical work on maternal bonds and self-discovery to an educational yet professional setting. Her most recent project, as of 2025, is the Encores! revival of Kurt Weill and Alan Jay Lerner's Love Life at New York City Center, originally slated for 2020 but postponed; this ambitious vaudeville spanning American history emphasizes epic family sagas with satirical flair, starring Kate Baldwin and Nicholas Christopher under Clark's guidance for intimate, performer-focused direction.[55][53][56][57][58]Educational roles and mentorship
Victoria Clark has served as a visiting faculty member at Yale University, where she has taught master classes on musical theater interpretation and performance techniques.[59][53] She has also held artist-in-residence positions at Pace University in 2014–2015 and 2020, during which she directed student productions such as The Light in the Piazza and provided hands-on guidance to emerging performers in acting and vocal integration.[8][51] Similarly, as artist-in-residence at Duke University, Clark mentored actors and singers across generations, emphasizing vocal technique and musical theater storytelling to inspire both students and audiences.[53][51] In addition to her institutional roles, Clark maintains a selective private voice studio in New York City, where she offers personalized coaching in vocal production, character development, and scene work for musical theater, drawing on her extensive Broadway experience to nurture professional growth.[59][60] She conducts workshops and guest lectures at universities and conservatories worldwide, including sessions at Harvard University on acting through song and at Williams College focused on music theater performance.[61][62] These programs often explore directing approaches for actors, bridging technical skills with emotional depth to prepare participants for stage careers. Clark's mentorship extends to Broadway-oriented initiatives, such as master classes at New York City Center, where she collaborates with composers like Jeanine Tesori to teach the synthesis of text, music, and vocal technique from the musical theater repertoire.[63][64] She has also served as a stage director for the NYU Graduate Musical Theater Writing Program, guiding writers and performers in developing new works through iterative feedback and rehearsal processes.[8] Through these efforts, Clark fosters a legacy of intergenerational support, helping shape the next generation of theater artists without specific named protégés highlighted in public records.[59]Personal life
Family and relationships
Victoria Clark was previously married, with whom she shares a son, Thomas Luke Guest (known as T.L.), born in 1995. The couple divorced in 2006, but Clark has maintained a close friendship with her ex-husband, describing their ongoing amicable relationship as a source of stability in co-parenting.[65][13] In 2015, Clark married Thomas Reidy, a former theater actor turned businessman, in a private ceremony at her brother's home in Durham, North Carolina. The pair met through the online dating site eHarmony, where Reidy was drawn to Clark after discovering her 2008 album Fifteen Seconds of Grace, interpreting its themes as a personal call for companionship; their shared passion for music deepened their bond.[65][66] Clark is a devoted mother, often crediting her son for providing emotional support during her demanding career, including attending her opening nights and premieres together. T.L., now an adult, has occasionally joined her at theater events, reflecting the family's encouragement of her professional pursuits. The family resides in Manhattan's Hudson Heights neighborhood, a location Clark chose post-divorce for its family-friendly environment and proximity to Broadway, aiding her work-life balance.[13][67][8]Philanthropy and interests
Victoria Clark has been actively involved in theater advocacy, particularly through her longstanding membership in Actors' Equity Association, where she has served as a deputy on various contracts across Broadway, national tours, and regional productions.[68] In 2019, she ran for Eastern Regional Principal Councilor, emphasizing her commitment to protecting members' healthcare, workplace safety, and fair negotiations during times of industry uncertainty.[68] Her advocacy extends to supporting arts education initiatives, including participation in fundraisers for the PATH Fund, a nonprofit dedicated to promoting arts education and literacy via performing arts programs.[68] A dedicated supporter of Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, Clark has expressed profound gratitude for the organization's aid to friends affected by HIV/AIDS, stating, "I am grateful that Broadway Cares has always been there, helping so many of my friends with HIV and AIDS in the years when we lost so many. I am inspired by their work and honored to be a part of it."[69] She has contributed to their efforts through events like Broadway Barks, an annual adopt-a-thon benefiting New York City animal shelters and rescue groups; in 2011, she joined stars including Bernadette Peters and Edie Falco for the 13th annual benefit.[70] More recently, in July 2025, Clark attended the event in Shubert Alley, describing it as "the highlight of the year" and praising the unconditional love animals provide while advocating for their placement in permanent homes.[71] In the 2020s, amid post-pandemic theater recovery, she has continued supporting food insecurity causes aligned with Broadway initiatives, such as the West Side Campaign Against Hunger, which provides access to healthy food and services for New Yorkers.[69] Beyond philanthropy, Clark's personal interests deeply influence her artistic pursuits, rooted in a lifelong passion for music that began with piano and voice lessons at age six, encouraged by her family. Her dedication to vocal technique and musical interpretation, honed through these interests, underscores her role as a versatile artist who blends personal creativity with professional endeavors.Awards and honors
Tony Awards
Victoria Clark has won two Tony Awards for Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical, first in 2005 for her role as Margaret Johnson in The Light in the Piazza and again in 2023 for portraying Kimberly Levaco in Kimberly Akimbo. These victories highlight her ability to embody complex, emotionally layered characters in intimate, character-driven musicals. At the 59th Annual Tony Awards on June 5, 2005, Clark received the award for The Light in the Piazza, Adam Guettel's poignant exploration of love and family in Florence. Her performance was lauded for its nuanced depiction of a mother's evolving self-discovery amid her daughter's romance. Competing against a strong field including Sutton Foster for Little Women and Christina Applegate for Sweet Charity, Clark's win affirmed the production's artistic risks, which also earned Tonys for score and book. In her acceptance speech, she tearfully thanked her husband David Loud, son Andy, and parents, concluding with, "You are my light in the piazza," a direct nod to the show's central metaphor of illumination through vulnerability.[72][73] Clark's 2023 triumph came at the 76th Annual Tony Awards on June 11, for Kimberly Akimbo, David Lindsay-Abaire and Jeanine Tesori's heartfelt story of a teen navigating progeria and family chaos. At age 63, her win as the oldest recipient in the category spotlighted opportunities for seasoned actresses in leading musical roles, amid nominees including Annaleigh Ashford for Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street and Eva Noblezada for Hadestown.[74] The victory bolstered the show's profile, contributing to its Best Musical win and extended run, while underscoring themes of embracing imperfection. During the ceremony, Clark's speech emphasized empowerment, dedicating it to "all the weird kids out there who feel like they don't fit in" and to her late mother, blending humor about aging with the production's time-reversal motif.[5][75] Beyond her wins, Clark has garnered three nominations for featured roles, demonstrating her range in ensemble-driven productions. In 2013, she was nominated for Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Musical as Marie, the fairy godmother, in Rodgers + Hammerstein's Cinderella. Learning of the nod while at the dentist, Clark reacted with characteristic humility, later expressing excitement about sharing the awards season with her son. She prepared for the role by drawing on her vocal coaching background to infuse the character with warmth and whimsy, enhancing the show's modern fairy-tale appeal. Additional nominations came in 2011 for Sister Mary Patrick in Sister Act and in 2015 for Aunt Alicia (Mamita) in Gigi.[76][77][78] These accolades mark pivotal milestones in Clark's career, bridging her early breakthroughs to later revivals and affirming her status as a Broadway mainstay whose performances resonate across generations.[79]Other theater awards
In addition to her Tony Awards, Victoria Clark has received numerous accolades from other prominent theater organizations, recognizing her versatile performances across Broadway, Off-Broadway, and regional stages. These honors underscore her ability to portray complex, emotionally layered characters in musical theater. For her portrayal of Margaret Johnson in The Light in the Piazza (2005), Clark won the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actress in a Musical, celebrating her nuanced depiction of a mother's protective yet evolving bond with her daughter during a transformative trip to Italy.[80] She also earned the Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Actress in a Musical for the same role, highlighting her vocal and dramatic excellence in Adam Guettel's score.[1] Additionally, her performance in the Chicago premiere of The Light in the Piazza at the Goodman Theatre (2004) garnered the Joseph Jefferson Award for Actress in a Principal Role in a Musical, a key regional honor from Chicago's theater community.[81] Clark's performance as Kimberly Levaco in Kimberly Akimbo (2022 Off-Broadway transfer to Broadway in 2023) brought further recognition, including the Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Actress in a Musical for her empathetic embodiment of a teenager grappling with a rare aging condition and family dysfunction.[78] She also received the Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Lead Performer in a Musical for the Atlantic Theater Company production, affirming her impact in the Off-Broadway landscape.[82] The original Broadway cast recording of Kimberly Akimbo earned a Grammy Award nomination for Best Musical Theater Album in 2024, with Clark as a principal soloist alongside Justin Cooley and the ensemble.[83] Other notable honors include Drama League Award nominations for Distinguished Performance for Kimberly Akimbo (2022) and Sister Act (2011), reflecting peer recognition within the industry, though she did not win.[2] Up to 2025, no additional major theater awards have been reported for Clark beyond these.Credits
Stage credits
Clark's Broadway debut came in the 1984 original production of Sunday in the Park with George, where she played multiple ensemble roles including Celeste #1, Celeste #2, and Frieda at the Booth Theatre.[84] She continued with supporting and understudy roles in the 1992 revival of Guys and Dolls as Martha, understudy for Miss Adelaide and Sarah Brown, at the Martin Beck Theatre.[6] In 1993, she appeared as a performer in the revue A Grand Night for Singing at the Helen Hayes Theatre.[85] Her leading roles began to emerge in the late 1990s and early 2000s. In 1997, Clark portrayed Alice Beane in the Tony-winning musical Titanic at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre.[86] She took on replacement roles in the 1998 revival of Cabaret as Fräulein Kost and Fritzie at Studio 54.[78] In 2003, she joined the long-running Urinetown as Penelope Pennywise at the Lyceum Theatre.[6] Clark earned acclaim for her portrayal of Margaret Johnson in the 2005 Broadway premiere of The Light in the Piazza at the Vivian Beaumont Theater.[87] In the 2010s, she balanced multiple productions, including Mother Superior in the 2011 production of Sister Act at the Broadway Theatre.[6] She played Marie/the Fairy Godmother in Rodgers + Hammerstein's Cinderella (2013) at the Broadway Theatre and Mamita (replacement) in Gigi (2015) at the Neil Simon Theatre.[88] Following the Off-Broadway premiere, Clark transferred to Broadway as Kimberly Levaco Akimbo in Kimberly Akimbo (2023) at the Booth Theatre.[89] Her most recent Broadway appearance was in 2025's Punch as Joan and Nan at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre (September 29 – November 2).[90]| Year | Production | Role | Theater |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1984 | Sunday in the Park with George | Celeste #1, Celeste #2, Frieda | Booth Theatre |
| 1992 | Guys and Dolls (revival) | Martha; u/s Miss Adelaide, u/s Sarah Brown | Martin Beck Theatre |
| 1993 | A Grand Night for Singing | Performer | Helen Hayes Theatre |
| 1995 | How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying (revival) | Smitty | Richard Rodgers Theatre |
| 1997 | Titanic | Alice Beane | Lunt-Fontanne Theatre |
| 1998–2004 | Cabaret (revival, replacement) | Fräulein Kost; Fritzie | Studio 54 |
| 2003–2004 | Urinetown (replacement) | Penelope Pennywise | Lyceum Theatre |
| 2005 | The Light in the Piazza | Margaret Johnson | Vivian Beaumont Theater |
| 2011–2012 | Sister Act | Mother Superior | Broadway Theatre |
| 2013 | Rodgers + Hammerstein's Cinderella | Marie, the Fairy Godmother | Broadway Theatre |
| 2013 | The Snow Geese | Clarissa Hohmann | Samuel J. Friedman Theatre |
| 2013–2014 | Rodgers + Hammerstein's Cinderella (continued) | Marie, the Fairy Godmother | Broadway Theatre |
| 2015–2016 | Gigi (replacement) | Mamita | Neil Simon Theatre |
| 2023–2024 | Kimberly Akimbo | Kimberly Levaco Akimbo | Booth Theatre |
| 2025 | Punch | Joan; Nan | Samuel J. Friedman Theatre |
- 1989: States of Independence (world premiere), Mother Ann Lee, Joyce Theater[91]
- 2006: The Agony and the Agony, Mona, Playwrights Horizons[4]
- 2008: When the Rain Stops Falling (world premiere), Miantha, Mitzi E. Newhouse Theater (Lincoln Center Theater)[52]
- 2009: Love, Loss, and What I Wore, Various roles, Variety Arts Theatre[4]
- 2009: A Prayer for My Enemy (world premiere), Kathryn, Lucille Lortel Theatre[1]
- 2011: The Marriage of Bette and Boo (revival), Bette, Mitzi E. Newhouse Theater (Lincoln Center Theater)[52]
- 2021: Kimberly Akimbo (world premiere), Kimberly Levaco Akimbo, Linda Gross Theater (Atlantic Theater Company)[91]
Film and television credits
Films:- 1997: Anastasia, Ensemble vocals (voice)[3]
- 1999: Cradle Will Rock, Dulce Fox, directed by Tim Robbins[3]
- 2000: Archaeology of a Woman, Martha[8]
- 2009: Tickling Leo, Mimi[1]
- 2008: The Happening, Nursery Owner's Wife, directed by M. Night Shyamalan[3]
- 2010: Main Street, Willa Carton[8]
- 2010: Harvest, Anna[1]
- 2018: Wanderland, Claire[8]
- 2020: One Royal Holiday, Gabriella (TV movie)[3]
- 2008: Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Season 9, Episode "Unorthodox"[8]
- 2012: Homeland, Ellen Mathison, Season 2[3]
- 2018: The Truth About the Harry Quebert Affair, Season 1[8]
- 2019–2020: Almost Family, Diana/Valerie, 6 episodes[8]
- 2020: Little America, GoGo, Season 1, Episode "The Cowboy"[8]
- 2021: Pose, Vanessa, Season 3[92]
- 2021: The Blacklist, Mrs. French, Season 8, Episode "Elizabeth Keen: Conclusion, Part 1"[92]
- 2022: The Gilded Age, Joan Carlton, Season 1[92]
- 2025: The Gilded Age, Joan Carlton, 2 episodes, Season 3
- 2025: Elsbeth, Deborah Jordan, Season 1, Episode "Tearjerker"