Lady Gaga Debuts Two Songs on The Devil Wears Prada 2 Soundtrack
Lady Gaga debuted two new songs on the soundtrack to The Devil Wears Prada 2. The release adds “Shape of a Woman” and “Glamorous Life” to a project built around a sequel arriving nearly 20 years after the first film premiered.
Shape of a Woman, Glamorous Life
“Shape of a Woman” opens the soundtrack as an upbeat pop number, while “Glamorous Life” leans reflective, taking on the lure of fame’s glitter. Gaga wrote and recorded both tracks with Andrew Watt, Cirkut, and Gesaffelstein, the same collaboration she used on her 2025 album Mayhem.
That pairing keeps the songs inside Gaga’s current creative lane instead of turning them into one-off soundtrack work. For listeners, the practical result is simple: the two tracks arrive as part of a coordinated release, not a stray single attached to the film.
Doechii and Runway
Gaga also previously shared “Runway,” a collaboration with Doechii that appeared in the film’s trailer. Parris Goebel directed the music video, and the track marks the first time the two artists have worked together.
Doechii has called Gaga a massive influence and a “legend,” and described herself as the “biggest Lady Gaga fan.” Last July, Gaga told British Vogue that Doechii came “out of the gate with a pen that feels immediately legendary.”
Runway’s All-Female Soundtrack
The soundtrack is all-female and also features songs from Dua Lipa, Miley Cyrus, Olivia Dean, Raye, and SZA. Sienna Spiro wrote and recorded “Material Lover” for the sequel film, giving the project a lineup that reads more like a label showcase than a standard studio tie-in.
That setup gives Gaga a stronger lane than a lone soundtrack placement: she is part of the album’s center of gravity, alongside other major names in a franchise built around fashion, status, and image. Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt, and Stanley Tucci reprise their roles in the sequel, which follows Miranda Priestly as she navigates the decline of print journalism and shrinking editorial budgets.
For viewers and listeners, the immediate takeaway is that the soundtrack is doing more than filling space between scenes. Gaga’s two songs, plus “Runway,” make her one of the release’s defining voices before the sequel reaches theaters nearly 20 years after the original.