Victoria Clark (born October 10, 1959) is an American actress, musical theatre soprano, and director. Clark has performed in numerous Broadway musicals and in other theatre, film and television works. Her voice can also be heard on various cast albums and in several animated films. In 2008, she released her first solo album titled Fifteen Seconds of Grace. A five-time Tony Award nominee, Clark won her first Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical in 2005 for The Light in the Piazza. She also won the Drama Desk Award, Outer Critics Circle Award, and the Joseph Jefferson Award for the role. She won a second Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical in 2023 for Kimberly Akimbo.

Life and career

Clark was born and raised in Dallas, Texas, the daughter of Lorraine and Banks Clark. She studied the piano and attended the Hockaday School, an all-girls school in Dallas. She attended the Interlochen Arts Academy before going to Yale University, graduating in 1982.

At Yale, at the age of eighteen, she sang the role of Mabel in Gilbert and Sullivan's comic opera The Pirates of Penzance. She also sang the title role in Gilbert and Sullivan's Patience, and directed a production of Ruddigore for the Yale Gilbert & Sullivan Society. After college, Clark studied at New York University's Musical Theatre Master's Program at Tisch as a stage director and began to direct operas and musicals professionally. Although she continues to direct, she has primarily focused on singing and acting.

Clark's stage work includes understudying in the original Broadway production of Sunday in the Park with George (she never went on) and roles in the Broadway musicals Guys and Dolls (1992–93), A Grand Night for Singing (1993–94), How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying (1995–96, as Smitty), Titanic (1997–99, creating the role of Alice Beane), Cabaret (1999–2000, as Fraulein Kost) and Urinetown (2003, as Penelope Pennywise), as well as numerous roles Off-Broadway, in national tours and in regional theatre. She played Doris MacAfee in the City Center Encores! production of Bye Bye Birdie in 2004.

In 2005, Clark won the Tony Award for Best Leading Actress in a Musical, a Drama Desk Award, an Outer Critics Circle Award, and the Joseph Jefferson Award for her performance in the musical The Light in the Piazza (2005–06). Broadway.com commented on Clark's performance, "What is indisputable is that Victoria Clark has created a character for the ages. Lucas has done a superb job in fleshing out Margaret within the confines of a musical-theater libretto, and Clark responds with consummate precision and grace. Calling hers the musical performance of the year would be accurate. It would also be a drastic understatement." She appeared as former showgirl Sally Durant Plummer in the Encores! staged concert presentation of Follies in February 2007 at City Center. She next created the role of Margaret Brennan in The Marriage of Bette and Boo Off-Broadway in 2008 for the Roundabout Theatre Company.

Clark appeared in Prayer for My Enemy, a new play by Craig Lucas Off-Broadway at Playwrights Horizons from November 14 through December 21, 2008. The play concerned the consequences that the Iraq war has had on an American family, co-starred Michele Pawk and Jonathan Groff, and was directed by Bartlett Sher.

Victoria Clark attends 13th Annual Broadway Barks Benedict at Shubert Alley, New York City in July 2011

Clark has also appeared in movies, sung in several animated feature films, and appeared in roles in television episodes. She can be heard on a number of Broadway cast albums and other recordings. In 2008 she released her first solo album, Fifteen Seconds of Grace, produced by PS Classics. Clark teaches voice and studies acting at the Michael Howard Studios and voice with Edward Sayegh. Clark received the 2006 Distinguished Artist Award from the New York Singing Teachers' Association.

Clark played the Mother Superior in the Broadway production of Sister Act, which opened on April 20, 2011. For this role she was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical. Clark portrayed Sally in the Kennedy Center/Broadway production of Follies, running at the Center Theatre Group/Ahmanson Theatre, Los Angeles, from May 3 through June 9, 2012.

In 2013, Clark starred in the Manhattan Theatre Club's production of The Snow Geese by Sharr White alongside Mary-Louise Parker and Danny Burstein. Previously, she starred as Marie/the Fairy Godmother in the Broadway production of Cinderella. For this role, she received her second Tony Award nomination for Best Featured Actress in a Musical. She returned to the Broadway production of Cinderella for a run lasting from January to September 2014. In December 2014 Clark appeared as Carrie Mathison's mother on the Season 4 finale of Showtime's series Homeland. Clark played Mamita in the Broadway revival of Gigi, which opened in April 2015. For this performance, Clark received another nomination for the Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical.

In 2017, Clark appeared in the title role of Sousatzka in Toronto. It was intended to be a pre-Broadway tryout for controversial producer Garth Drabinsky. In 2022, she recorded Maury Yeston's December Songs, featuring orchestration by Larry Hochman.

After persuasion from longtime friend and composer Jeanine Tesori, Clark first donned the candy necklace and late 90s fashion of the title role of Kimberly Akimbo in its acclaimed and extended 2021 Off-Broadway run at the Linda Gross Theatre, produced by the Atlantic Theater Company, for which she garnered Lucille Lortel and Outer Critics Circle Awards. The musical debuted on Broadway in 2022, winning Clark her second Tony Award.

In 2025, Clark joined the cast of The Gilded Age as Joan Carlton.

Personal life

Clark married Thomas Reidy on August 1, 2015, in North Carolina. Her son, T.L., is from her previous marriage.

Filmography

Film
YearTitleRoleNotes
1996The Hunchback of Notre DameChorus (singing voice)
1997Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted ChristmasChorus (singing voice)Direct-to-video
1997AnastasiaEnsemble and Character Vocals (voice)
1999Cradle Will RockDulce Fox
2008The HappeningNursery Owner's Wife
2009Tickling LeoMadeline Pikler
2010HarvestAnna Monopoli
2010Main StreetMiriam
2011Dirty MovieTeacher
2012Archaeology of a WomanKate
Television
YearTitleRoleNotes
1975My Father's HouseZozoTV film
1998Law & OrderDetectiveEpisode: "Bait"
2003Law & Order: Special Victims UnitMargaret MeliaEpisode: "Choice"
2006Live from Lincoln CenterMargaret Johnson / HerselfEpisode: "The Light in the Piazza"
2009MercyMrs. SimanskiEpisode: "You Lost Me with the Cinderblock"
2001Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street in ConcertBeggar WomanTV film
2013Late Show with David LettermanFairy GodmotherSeason 20, episode 125
2014HomelandEllen MathisonEpisode: "Long Time Coming"
2016The Good WifeShannon JandermanEpisode: "Verdict"
2018The Truth About the Harry Quebert AffairAdult Jenny Quinn10 episodes
2019–2020Almost FamilyDiane Doyle8 episodes
2020Little AmericaTracyEpisode: "The Jaguar"
2020One Royal HolidayQueen GabriellaTV film
2021PoseVanessaEpisode: "Series Finale (Part I)"
2021The BlacklistMrs. French2 episodes
2025ElsbethDeborah JordanEpisode: "Tearjerker"
2025The Gilded AgeJoan Carlton2 episodes

Stage credits

Theatre
YearTitleRoleNotes
1986CatsJellylorumFirst US National Tour
1987Les MisérablesMadame ThénardierFirst US National Tour
1988SplendoraPerformerNew York
1989The Secret GardenMartha SowerbyVirginia Stage Company
1992Guys and DollsMartha u/s Miss AdelaideBroadway
1993A Grand Night for SingingPerformerBroadway
1995How to Succeed in Business Without Really TryingSmittyBroadway
1997TitanicAlice BeaneBroadway
1999CabaretFräulein Kost; FritzieBroadway
2001Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet StreetBeggar WomanConcert
2003UrinetownPenelope PennywiseBroadway
2003BabyArlene McNallyNew York
2004Bye Bye BirdieDoris MacAfeeEncores! Concert
2004The Light in the PiazzaMargaret JohnsonChicago
2005Broadway
2007FolliesSallyEncores! Concert
2008The Marriage of Bette and BooMargaret BrennanOff-Broadway
2008Prayer for My EnemyDoloresOff-Broadway
2009Love, Loss, and What I WorePerformerOff-Broadway
2010When the Rain Stops FallingGabrielle YorkOff-Broadway
2011Sister ActMother SuperiorBroadway
2012FolliesSallyAhmanson Theatre
2013Rodgers + Hammerstein's CinderellaMarieBroadway
2013The Snow GeeseClarissa HohmannBroadway
2015GigiInez AlvarezKennedy Center; Broadway
2017SousatzkaMadame SousatzkaToronto
2017AssassinsSara Jane MooreEncores!
2017Damn YankeesMeg BoydConcert
2017The Trouble with DougDirectorFredericia Theatre, Denmark
2019Lady in the DarkLiza ElliottNew York City Center
2021Kimberly AkimboKimberly LevacoOff-Broadway
2022Broadway
2025Love LifeDirectorEncores!
2025PunchJoanBroadway

Awards and nominations

YearAwardCategoryNominated workResult
2005Tony AwardBest Actress in a MusicalThe Light in the PiazzaWon
Drama Desk AwardOutstanding Actress in a MusicalWon
Outer Critics Circle AwardOutstanding Actress in a MusicalWon
Drama League AwardDistinguished PerformanceNominated
2010Drama Desk AwardOutstanding Featured Actress in a PlayWhen the Rain Stops FallingNominated
2011Tony AwardBest Featured Actress in a MusicalSister ActNominated
Drama Desk AwardOutstanding Featured Actress in a MusicalNominated
Outer Critics Circle AwardOutstanding Actress in a MusicalNominated
Drama League AwardDistinguished PerformanceNominated
2013Tony AwardBest Featured Actress in a MusicalRodgers + Hammerstein's CinderellaNominated
Outer Critics Circle AwardOutstanding Featured Actress in a MusicalNominated
2015Tony AwardBest Featured Actress in a MusicalGigiNominated
Outer Critics Circle AwardOutstanding Featured Actress in a MusicalNominated
2022Drama Desk AwardOutstanding Actress in a MusicalKimberly AkimboNominated
Lucille Lortel AwardsOutstanding Leading Performer in a MusicalWon
Outer Critics Circle AwardOutstanding Actress in a MusicalWon
Drama League AwardDistinguished PerformanceNominated
2023Tony AwardBest Actress in a MusicalWon
Dorian AwardOutstanding Lead Performance in a Broadway MusicalWon
2024Grammy AwardsBest Musical Theater AlbumNominated

External links