Taylor Swift is pulling her fans into the fire, releasing “The Fate of Ophelia” music video on YouTube.
The 3-minute video flickers with Easter eggs, literary references and a love story that blurs the line between Shakespeare’s tragic play and Swift’s real-life romance with Travis Kelce.
The visual moves between an opulent, boutique hotel and oil-painted Shakespearean scenes, tying the past and present together in one seamless story.
Before decoding the Easter eggs, it helps to understand Ophelia’s tragic story.
“So Ophelia drowned because Hamlet just messed with her head so much that she went crazy,” Swift explains in her “Official Release Party of a Showgirl” film, screened in theaters for one weekend. “She couldn’t take it anymore and all these men were just gaslighting her until she drowned.”
Much like her 2008 hit “Love Story” — which turned “Romeo and Juliet” into a fairytale ending — Swift flips tragedy into triumph.
“I fall in love with those characters so much that it, it hurts me that they die,” she said. “This is now the second song where I’ve gone back in and been like, ‘Yo, what if they got married instead of they die?'”
Onto the Easter eggs, Ophelia painting
The clip opens with Sam Mcwilliams, one of the dancers from Swift’s Eras Tour, vacuuming a lavish hotel’s carpet. He’s next to a cleaning cart as a nod to the way Swift entered her Eras Tour concerts every night. The title “The Fate of Ophelia” is seen in the ornate balcony railings, the purple stairs and the carpet below. At first glance there are two posters in the artwork that read “Female Rage”, which is the name of a musical Swift trademarked in 2024, and “Wood,” which is track 9 on the album. There is also a mural on the wall surrounding the chandelier of Swift standing next to the album’s two producers and collaborators Max Martin and Shellback.
The camera pans to art on the wall of Swift lying amid flowers. The brushstrokes are a direct parallel to the Sir John Everett Millais painting of “Ophelia.” But instead of the water overtaking the fictional character, Swift gets up and walks off as if the demise of the character was a bad dream. An orange song bird that we will see a few times in the music video flies by and Swift sings the first verse.
Her entire Eras Tour cast joins her as the fast moving background transports her into another painting. But first, clock the 12 orange stars to signify the 12 tracks on the album. There is also a literal reference to “megaphone” when she sings it.
Swift strikes a pose in a painting that includes a wooden statue of her cat Olivia Benson. The orange song bird lands on her arm as she stands next to a table of pearls, a peach (lyric in “Showgirl” title track) and her famous sourdough bread (probably dubbed the “Fate of Dough-felia”).
“Can my bread be in the music video?” Swift said while laughing during a behind-the-scenes moment.
An exit sign glows in the background which appears more times in the music video, as a metaphoric exit to the Eras Tour. Swift strikes the match and a fire breather performs on the word “pyro.”
Dressing room
As the scene transports back to the hotel, a Marilyn Monroe looking Swift appears in a spangly red showgirl outfit. Headshots of her female dancers are on the wall as a call to the title track’s lyric, “And all the headshots on the walls of the dance hall.”
Once in the dressing room, fans may notice a black-and-white photo of Kelce from his marry, kiss and kill interview when he told reporter Kristina Zias he would kiss Swift and marry Katy Perry. Once the dancers finish a tap dancing number, the curtain is pulled back to a jazzy nightclub with Swift go-go dancing in the center. Her real band performs behind her.
Walk the plank
Cue the chimes, as now another painting comes to life with a red-headed heroine in a silver long-sleeve dress with a bursting red heart navigating a ship. Six of Swift’s male backup dancers cause mayhem behind her. Peep dancer Jan Ravnik sliding down the ladder. Her four backup singers rise from the wooden waves like mythical sirens. The scene is reminiscent of another Shakespearean play, “The Tempest,” which has only one female, Miranda, who is banished to an island with her father for 12 years. In a 1916 John William Waterhouse painting, Miranda is depicted with fiery red hair.
Swift walks the plank and falls off into the sea.
Life rafts
The next scene is straight out of a 1930s Busby Berkeley film. Swift’s face is framed by a life preserver as dozens of dancers holding white floating devices dance.
“That’s a play on the fate of Ophelia, like Ophelia drowned,” Swift said in her explanation of the scene. “So we’ve got these lifesavers, these lifesaving devices which could have prevented that from happening.”
A director’s clapboard appears with a slew of Easter eggs.
“Sequins are forever” is a play on icon Elizabeth Taylor’s famous phrase “diamonds are forever.” Swift sings about her in track 2.”Take 100″ is a joke on if you add Kelce’s jersey number 87 with Swift’s favorite number 13.And “Featuring Kitty Finlay” is a nod to the showgirl character Swift sings about in track 12, and her grandmother Marjorie Finlay who was an opera singer. (Kitty Finlay is also the name of her mom, Andrea Swift’s, great dane.)
As the clapboard rises, a black haired Swift who resembles Elizabeth Taylor with her violet eyeshadow wears a rope dress intertwined with a theater’s lift lines. Behind her are 12 boxes with the initials of the 12 tracks. A black-and-white image of a movie poster reads “sequins are forever” in another Taylor nod.
A quick Bob Mackey, Las Vegas inspired showgirl routine is next before Swift rushes into the final hotel scene.
Album artwork ends the video
Swift shimmies onto a cart. As it wheels by, her backup dancer Natalie Reid holds a purse with a chihuahua in it as a wink to the “Actually Romantic” line that describes a hater’s insult as “I know you think it comes off vicious but it’s precious, adorable / Like a toy chihuahua barking at me from a tiny purse / That’s how much it hurts.”
Swift catches a football during the line “pledge allegiance to your hands, your team, your vibes” and runs into hotel room 87 as an Easter egg to her Kansas City fiancé and his football number.
She enters an emerald green bathroom where the orange songbird flies out of the window. The camera zooms into her laying in the bathwater. On the floor of the bathroom is an Oscar (lyric from Wi$h LiSt) and an opalite rock is by the tub handle. The ending is a full circle moment to the beginning artwork. Instead of Shakespeare’s tragedy, this is Swift’s story where she’s alive and well, in love and keeping it 100.
Updated to include more eggs.
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