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Victoria Mahoney
Victoria Mahoney
from Wikipedia

Victoria Mahoney is an American actress and filmmaker. Her debut feature was 2011’s Yelling to the Sky.

Key Information

Career

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Acting

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Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s Mahoney worked as an actress in largely unnamed roles, appearing in Seinfeld as the character Gladys[1] and in the movie Legally Blonde.[2] In 1992 she starred as Antinea in the French film L'Atlantide, based on the French novel Atlantida by Pierre Benoit. Her most recent appearance in front of the camera was a brief cameo in Ava DuVernay's short film Say Yes in 2013.[citation needed]

Directing

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Victoria Mahoney made her feature directing debut in 2011 with the semi-autobiographical film Yelling to the Sky.[1] The film follows a young girl’s struggle in high school and her difficult home life. She developed the script through the help of the Directors and Screenwriters Sundance Institute Labs[3] and was awarded the titles of Auerbach Screenwriting Fellow, Annerberg Film Fellow, Cinereach Fellow, Maryland Fellow, IFP Narrative Lab fellow and a Tribeca Film Fellow. The film starred Zoe Kravitz as a troubled teen and Jason Clarke as her father.[4]

Yelling to the Sky debuted in competition at the 61st Berlin International Film Festival and was nominated for the Golden Bear.[5] Mahoney was the first woman director/writer, American invited in over sixty years to the Golden Bear competition.[citation needed] Variety gave the film a mixed review saying it had, "a strong directional voice struggling to be heard," and was, "strong on texture but taxingly light on narrative."[6] Yelling to the Sky also screened at SXSW before releasing theatrically and on streaming in December, 2012.[7][8]

In 2013, she was nominated for the inaugural Tribeca Film Institute's Heineken Affinity Award's $20,000 prize. In a profile accompanying her nomination, Mahoney explained what she wants people to take away from her films saying, “My overriding intentions as a filmmaker, is to tap into individual inquiries and reflect-whatever is hidden... From my filmmaking, I’d love audiences to receive some measure of inspiration; to investigate the human condition.”[2] Mahoney ultimately lost to Ava DuVernay, with whom she would later partner on a television project in 2020.[9][10]

In the same year, Mahoney directed a short film starring Selena Gomez and Shiloh Fernandez for Flaunt.[11] She also directed several episodes of television shows, including Queen Sugar and You.[12] In 2018 Mahoney was hired as second unit director on Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, marking her as the first woman to direct on a Star Wars film in the franchise's forty year history.[5]

In 2020, Amazon Studios announced that Mahoney would be working with Ava DuVernay to adapt Octavia E. Butler’s sci-fi novel Dawn for television.[10] In 2021, Netflix announced that Mahoney would take over directing duties from Gina Prince-Bythewood as director for The Old Guard 2.[13] She was originally slated to direct the action film Shadow Force, but dropped out and was replaced by Joe Carnahan; Mahoney still received uncredited Additional Literary Material for her work on the screenplay.[14][15]

Filmography

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Film

Short film

  • Wracked (2012) (Also producer)
  • Searching (2013)

TV movies

  • Bleach (2014)
  • Under the Bridge (2024)

Television

Year Title Episode(s)
2016 Survivor's Remorse "The Photoshoot"
Queen Sugar "By Any Chance"[12]
Grey's Anatomy "Falling Slowly"
2017 American Crime "Season Three: Episode Three"
Gypsy "Euphoria"
"Marfa"
Claws "Fallout"
Power "That Ain't Me"
2018 Seven Seconds "Witnesses for the Prosecution"
You "The Captain"
2019 I Am the Night "Dark Flower"
"Matador"
The Red Line "We Must All Care" (Also producer)
2020 Lovecraft Country "A History of Violence"
2021 The Morning Show "Confirmations"
2022 Night Sky "Lake Diving"
2024 Grey's Anatomy "I Can See Clearly Now"
2025 Suits LA "Pilot" (Also executive producer)

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Victoria Mahoney is an American filmmaker and actress whose career spans acting in the 1990s and early 2000s, followed by directing television episodes and feature films, with her debut feature (2011) marking her transition to writing and directing. Born and raised in New York, Mahoney began as an actress under the tutelage of Shelly Winters, appearing in shows like and films such as Switch (1991), before developing —starring and —through the Sundance Institute's Directors and Screenwriters Labs, earning an invitation to the International Film Festival's Generation 14plus competition as the first American woman director-writer in over sixty years. She subsequently directed episodes of series including Seven Seconds, , You, Power, The Red Line, , , , and The Morning Show, and served as second unit director on Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker (2019), becoming the first woman and first Black woman to direct footage for a Star Wars production. Mahoney's next project, , represents her return to feature directing after a focus on television work.

Early Life and Education

Upbringing and Family Background

Victoria Mahoney was raised in a biracial family as one of six children born to a Black mother and a white father, both artists, during a time when remained illegal in certain U.S. states prior to the 1967 Supreme Court decision. Her family lacked financial wealth, with Mahoney later describing herself as the sole earner among her relatives. She grew up in New York, spending time in neighborhoods including Rego Park in and Bay Shore on , amid a challenging home environment marked by her mother's mental illness. Mahoney's mother, who exhibited lucid but fluctuating functionality, signed herself out of a psychiatric ward to prevent the state from declaring her a ward and removing the children, effectively requiring Mahoney to assume parental responsibilities at a young age and forgoing much of her own childhood. The mother raised the six children largely on her own under these circumstances. Mahoney experienced early conflict with her father but reconciled with him in her twenties, coming to view him as an individual navigating personal difficulties rather than solely through familial roles. These dynamics informed the semi-autobiographical elements of her debut feature (2011), which depicts a mixed-race family's adolescent struggles and a mother's challenges mirroring her own upbringing.

Acting Training and Influences

Mahoney initiated her professional acting pursuits in New York theater, performing in productions during the early stages of her career before relocating to to expand into film and television. Her formal acting training occurred under the guidance of Academy Award-winning actress at The Actors Studio, where she honed techniques emphasizing emotional depth and authenticity in performance. Winters, known for her approach rooted in Stanislavski principles, served as a pivotal mentor, influencing Mahoney's early emphasis on raw, personal vulnerability over stylized delivery. This training informed Mahoney's sparse but persistent screen work in the 1990s and early 2000s, including uncredited cameo appearances in episodes of (1993) and films such as (2001), alongside roles in independent projects like Switch (1991) and Zalman King's Red Shoe Diaries series (1992–1997). These experiences, though minor, underscored the challenges of breaking into Hollywood as an emerging Black actress, shaping her resilience and later pivot toward directing while drawing from Winters' lessons on persistence amid limited opportunities.

Acting Career

Theater and Film Roles

Mahoney began her acting career in theater, training under actress at The Actor's Studio. She appeared in productions during this period, though specific roles remain undocumented in available records. Transitioning to screen acting in the early 1990s, Mahoney secured minor roles in film and television. In 1991, she appeared in the comedy Switch, directed by , and episodes of the erotic anthology series . Her film credits continued with small parts in Wild Orchid 2: Two Shades of Blue (1992) and the TV movie Atlantide (1992). Additional television work included the role of Gladys in an episode of during its run from 1989 to 1998, Chantal in the 1998 TV movie The First , and a part in Back in Business (1996). By 2001, she played a reporter in . These roles were typically brief and uncredited or named minimally, reflecting the challenges of breaking through in Hollywood during that era.

Challenges in Early Acting

Mahoney began her professional acting career in New York with off-off-Broadway theater productions before relocating to in the to pursue opportunities in television and film. She trained under actress , who emphasized techniques such as maintaining stillness to convey emotion, a lesson Mahoney later credited for shaping her approach to performance. However, breaking into substantial roles proved elusive, as she primarily secured minor parts in pilots, European films, and independent projects, often described as "ridiculous films" taken for financial necessity rather than artistic merit. Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, Mahoney's on-screen appearances remained limited to blink-and-you-miss-them roles, such as Gladys Mayo in a season of and a small part in (2001). These gigs provided minimal income to cover basic expenses but offered little creative satisfaction or career advancement, highlighting the competitive barriers for aspiring actors without established networks or advantages. Industry preconceptions about her potential further compounded these issues, as evidenced by experiences like being overlooked by agents at the 2006 in favor of male peers. Financial instability marked this period, culminating in , including prolonged couch-surfing and nights without shelter, which persisted for nearly a decade amid her pursuits. It took 11 years to secure representation, underscoring the systemic delays and risks for outliers in Hollywood's landscape. These hardships, coupled with unfulfilled artistic ambitions, ultimately prompted Mahoney to pivot toward writing and directing, where she sought greater agency over storytelling.

Transition to Directing

Development of Debut Feature

Mahoney wrote the screenplay for Yelling to the Sky over a period of approximately ten years, drawing from her semi-autobiographical experiences of a tumultuous upbringing in New York City, including themes of family dysfunction and adolescent struggle. The narrative was influenced by Anton Chekhov's The Three Sisters, adapting its familial tensions to a modern urban context involving mixed-race siblings navigating poverty and violence. Early drafts benefited from mentorship by author Hubert Selby, Jr., encountered during her time at the University of Southern California, where she honed her writing amid frustrations with her acting career. The script's breakthrough came through selection into the Sundance Institute's Directors and Screenwriters Labs, first noted in 2005 as part of the Institute's feature film development initiatives, followed by participation in the 2006 June labs. There, Mahoney refined multiple drafts, addressing personal vulnerabilities and narrative structure with feedback from industry professionals, transforming the project from personal catharsis into a viable feature. By 2010, it received further support as a Cinereach grantee through Sundance, enabling progression toward production. Financing emerged from Mahoney's deliberate embrace of financial precarity, self-funding the low-budget independent production without traditional studio backing, a decision rooted in her outlier status in Hollywood. This approach allowed creative control but involved personal hardships, including temporary during phases. The completed script also advanced through the Independent Filmmaker Project's Narrative Lab, solidifying its readiness for in 35mm format.

Initial Independent Work

Victoria Mahoney's initial independent directing efforts focused on developing and producing her debut , Yelling to the Sky, a semi-autobiographical drama completed in 2011. The screenplay, which Mahoney wrote alongside directing, drew from personal experiences of family instability and urban hardship, centering on 17-year-old protagonist O'Hara, played by , who assumes responsibility for her siblings amid parental neglect and neighborhood violence. Supporting roles featured actors including as Sweetness's sister and as her abusive stepfather, emphasizing themes of resilience and familial bonds under duress. The project originated through Mahoney's participation in the Sundance Institute's Directors, Screenwriters, and Producers Labs, where she refined the script and secured initial funding as a low-budget independent production. Filmed primarily in New York locations to capture authentic urban grit, Yelling to the Sky premiered at film festivals before a in select U.S. markets, including New York on December 14, 2012. Critics noted its raw emotional intensity but divided on its pacing and narrative execution, with aggregating a 36% approval rating from 11 reviews, highlighting strengths in Kravitz's performance while critiquing occasional melodrama. This work represented Mahoney's deliberate pivot from , where she had accumulated credits in theater and small roles, to behind-the-camera leadership, relying on personal networks and lab mentorship rather than studio backing. The modest distribution through platforms like and DVD underscored the challenges of independent cinema visibility, yet it established Mahoney's voice in handling intimate, character-driven stories rooted in real-world adversity.

Television Directing Career

Key Series Contributions

Mahoney's television directing career gained momentum in 2016 with her debut episode on , helming "Falling Slowly" (season 13, episode 4), which aired on ABC on October 13 and focused on character-driven medical and personal conflicts within the series' established ensemble. That same year, she directed "By Any Chance" (season 1, episode 5) for OWN's , a drama centered on family dynamics in rural , contributing to the show's pioneering all-female directorial lineup for its first season. In 2017, Mahoney expanded to anthology and limited series, directing the third episode of American Crime's third season, exploring themes of and community tension. She also handled two episodes of Netflix's Gypsy: "" (episode 6) and "Marfa" (episode 9), both from the psychological thriller's single season. Her work on Starz's Power and TNT's Claws followed, with episodes emphasizing high-stakes narratives and ensemble interplay, though specific titles remain unhighlighted in primary credit listings. By 2018, Mahoney directed for Netflix's limited series Seven Seconds, tackling a storyline in a single-episode capacity, and an installment of the thriller You, aligning with the platform's serialized suspense format. Subsequent contributions included episodes of All Access's The Red Line (2019), HBO's (2020), Apple's The Morning Show (2021), and Amazon's (2022), where she navigated horror-fantasy elements, workplace intrigue, and sci-fi mysteries, respectively. Mahoney returned to Grey's Anatomy for additional episodes across seasons, including "I Can See Clearly Now" (season 20, episode 9) in 2024, demonstrating sustained involvement in the procedural's evolving resident and attending physician arcs. In 2024, she directed the pilot for NBC's Suits: L.A., a spin-off extending the legal drama franchise with a Los Angeles setting and new ensemble. These assignments across broadcast, cable, and streaming platforms underscore her versatility in handling diverse genres, from family sagas to thrillers, often with 1-2 episodes per series except for long-runners like Grey's Anatomy.

Style and Notable Episodes

Mahoney's television directing emphasizes emotional authenticity over technical spectacle, prioritizing character depth and narrative intimacy informed by her prior acting experience. This approach allows her to adapt fluidly to diverse genres, from medical procedurals to family dramas and thrillers, often enhancing actor performances within tight episodic constraints. Among her notable television episodes, Mahoney directed "By Any Chance," the fifth episode of Queen Sugar's first season, which aired on October 5, 2016, and explored familial tensions in a Southern agricultural setting. In Grey's Anatomy, she helmed "Falling Slowly" from season 13, aired March 23, 2017, focusing on interpersonal conflicts among surgeons, as well as the season 21 episode "I Can See Clearly Now," aired April 4, 2024, involving resident training dynamics. She also directed the pilot episode of Suits LA, which premiered in 2025, marking an entry into legal drama revival. Additional standout contributions include episodes of Lovecraft Country (2020), blending horror with social commentary, and You (2018), heightening psychological suspense.

Feature Film Directing

Second Unit on Major Franchises

In April 2018, selected Victoria Mahoney as director for Star Wars: Episode IX – The Rise of Skywalker, the final installment in the Skywalker saga, produced by and released by on December 20, 2019. This role marked Mahoney as the first woman to direct any portion of a Star Wars in the franchise's 42-year history up to that point, as well as the first Black woman and first woman of color to do so. Mahoney's hiring stemmed from Abrams' review of her prior independent work, including her 2011 feature debut , facilitated by a recommendation from director , with whom Mahoney had collaborated on episodes of . In this capacity, she oversaw a crew of approximately 150 members, focusing on action-heavy sequences, establishing shots, and background elements separate from the main unit led by Abrams. Key contributions included directing the Pasaana desert chase sequence on the planet Pasaana, involving speeder pursuits and alien environments filmed in Jordan's desert, as well as additional material for the film's opening and planetary action beats. The production demanded rapid execution amid the franchise's high-stakes scale, with Mahoney managing across locations in the UK and while adhering to Abrams' vision for the sequel trilogy's conclusion. She has described the experience as a rigorous test of efficiency, handling complex integration and stunt coordination without the narrative oversight of . This assignment elevated her profile in Hollywood, demonstrating her capability on a blockbuster budget exceeding $275 million, though second unit work typically receives limited on-screen credit and public attention compared to main directors. No other major franchise second unit roles for Mahoney have been documented in her credited as of 2025.

Studio Feature Debut

Mahoney's studio feature directorial debut came with , a to the 2020 action film based on Greg Rucka's series. Hired in 2021 to helm the project after original director opted out, Mahoney oversaw a screenplay co-written by Rucka and Sarah L. Walker, centering on immortal warrior Andy (), now vulnerable to mortality, as she and her team confront a new antagonistic force led by a character portrayed by . The production retained key cast members from the first film, including , , , and , alongside additions like and Veronica Ngo. occurred primarily in , with Mahoney drawing on her second-unit experience from Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker to manage large-scale action sequences involving practical effects and choreography for immortal combatants. The film premiered exclusively on on July 2, 2025, with a runtime of approximately 107 minutes and an R rating for violence and language. Marketed as an expansion of the franchise's lore, it emphasized themes of legacy and among near-immortals, though critics noted deviations from the source material's tighter narrative focus. Mahoney has described the role as a culmination of persistence, crediting mentors like for building her action-directing credentials, while highlighting logistical challenges such as coordinating international shoots amid post-pandemic constraints. Reception was mixed to negative, with a 27% approval rating on from 109 reviews, praising Theron's performance and select fight choreography but critiquing pacing, underdeveloped new characters, and a perceived dilution of the original's emotional stakes compared to Prince-Bythewood's entry. Audience scores on averaged 5.1/10 from over 40,000 ratings, reflecting divided views on its ending teasing further sequels, which Mahoney confirmed she would not direct. Despite commercial viability through Netflix's global streaming model—bolstered by the first film's 178 million hours viewed in its debut month—the project underscored Mahoney's transition to high-budget spectacles, though some outlets questioned its fidelity to Rucka's vision amid studio expansions.

Professional Milestones and Reception

Industry Breakthroughs

Victoria Mahoney achieved a landmark in the film industry in 2019 when she was selected as second unit director for Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, becoming the first woman and the first African-American woman to direct any portion of a Star Wars film. This role involved overseeing action sequences and additional photography, expanding her portfolio from independent features and television episodes to a blockbuster franchise with a production budget exceeding $250 million. The opportunity arose through a direct recommendation from filmmaker to director , who valued Mahoney's prior work on projects like Love Is____ and her ability to handle complex ensemble dynamics. Building on this exposure, Mahoney secured her first major studio feature directorial assignment with for , announced in 2022 and released on July 2, 2025, marking her return to narrative feature filmmaking after a 14-year gap since her 2011 debut . The sequel, starring and adapting material from Greg Rucka's graphic novels, represented a breakthrough in scale, with Mahoney managing large-scale action and VFX-heavy sequences informed by her Star Wars experience, which she credited for honing her efficiency on high-stakes sets. This project underscored her progression to leading tentpole productions, a rarity for directors transitioning from second-unit roles, amid industry efforts to diversify behind-the-camera leadership. These milestones positioned Mahoney as a trailblazer for underrepresented directors in Hollywood's franchise ecosystem, where women and minorities have historically comprised less than 10% of directors on top-grossing films, per annual USC Annenberg Inclusion Initiative reports. Her advancements challenged entrenched barriers, as evidenced by her own accounts of prior rejections despite extensive television credits on series like and .

Critical and Commercial Response

Mahoney's debut feature (2011) garnered mixed critical response, with a 36% Tomatometer score on from 11 reviews, praising its textured emotional portrayal of family dysfunction in but critiquing its indirect narrative and lack of dramatic propulsion. noted its "artful indirectness" that "may frustrate viewers seeking clearer storytelling," while Variety highlighted strong atmospheric elements alongside a "taxingly light" plot. Commercially, the independent drama achieved negligible success, with reported domestic grosses near zero due to its limited theatrical rollout following festival premieres. Her television directing, particularly the episode "A History of Violence" from Lovecraft Country (2020), received positive notices for blending horror, action, and character development effectively. Critics commended its "fun" standalone adventure structure, haunting musical scoring, and standout , contributing to the series' overall 88% approval amid its exploration of 1950s racial terror. Episodes on established series like Grey's Anatomy and Queen Sugar aligned with those shows' commercial viability, though specific attribution to Mahoney's segments remains tied to broader production successes without isolated metrics. As second-unit director on Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker (2019), Mahoney's work marked her as the first woman and first Black woman to direct footage in the franchise, handling key action sequences amid the film's $1.07 billion global gross. However, reception to her contributions was subsumed under the movie's polarized reviews (51% on ), with no distinct critical separation for second-unit elements, though industry commentary emphasized the milestone's role in diversifying high-profile pipelines. Mahoney's studio feature The Old Guard 2 (2025), starring and , encountered severe critical backlash, debuting at 25% on from 48 reviews and labeled "the year's biggest disappointment" for diluted action, weak dialogue, and narrative incoherence compared to the 2020 original's 80% score. Audience scores fared marginally better at 44%, but the sequel's streaming debut on propelled it rapidly up viewing charts, underscoring a disconnect between consensus and viewer engagement for franchise extensions.

Personal Philosophy and Industry Views

Resilience and Career Struggles

Mahoney endured significant personal and professional hardships early in her career, including a decade of and couch-surfing without a financial safety net, while pursuing in Hollywood. After attending the Sundance labs in 2006 with a feature script, she faced repeated rejections, such as an agent who dismissed her work and instead signed a male colleague. These setbacks persisted for years, reflecting broader industry barriers for outliers, particularly directors deemed non-viable by gatekeepers. Despite lacking a Plan B, Mahoney maintained unwavering commitment to her path, channeling what she described as "healthy fury" into sustained motivation, likening it to that transforms adversity into drive. It took her 11 years to secure an agent in 2017 and an additional 20 years from her early efforts to direct her first studio feature, in 2025. Key breakthroughs came through mentors like documentary filmmaker and recommendations from figures such as , who connected her to for second-unit directing on Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker in 2017—a role where Abrams uniquely risked hiring an unproven outlier when others would not. Her resilience manifested in a tactical, self-advocating approach: persistently hunting opportunities, servicing directors' specific needs, and aligning with visionaries willing to employ women in a system historically resistant to their advancement. This grit enabled incremental progress, from her 2011 independent debut to television episodes on series like and , culminating in major franchise work despite prolonged exclusion from studio features.

Perspectives on Hollywood Dynamics

Victoria Mahoney has described Hollywood's progress for women directors as occurring at a "snail's pace," noting that after nearly 30 years working on sets since 1991, she became the first woman to direct any portion of a Star Wars film in the franchise's 42-year history. She attributes her breakthroughs to rare instances of risk-taking by allies like J.J. Abrams and Ava DuVernay, emphasizing that "no other director at that franchise level has hired a second unit director like me" and that success as an "outlier" requires "allies, advocates, and accomplices" rather than solo effort. Mahoney highlights persistent unconscious biases in industry dynamics, such as crew members assuming women of color are "diversity hires" who lack expertise, disregarding their extensive experience. She recounts facing preconceptions about her capabilities, leading to exhaustion from over-preparing to counter doubts, and expresses a desire for equal treatment: "Just treat me like you treat the guys," allowing focus on craft like lenses and shots rather than proving worth. These barriers contributed to her early career struggles, including a decade of couch-surfing and without a safety net, followed by 11 years to secure an agent and 20 years to direct a studio feature like in 2025. On diversity, Mahoney critiques the industry's tendency to hand storytelling power "very casually" to a narrow group, resulting in homogenized perspectives filtered through a "very particular lens," and calls for opening pathways to new storytellers to foster genuine change. She views current inclusion efforts, such as those at Bad Robot, as exceptional rather than normative, warning that "institutionalized" issues persist despite a few breakthroughs, as "people keep thinking because a few of us are working that the whole world has changed." Mahoney stresses the value of community among Black female filmmakers—like sharing experiences with DuVernay and Gina Prince-Bythewood—as a counter to isolation, contrasting it with earlier generations' solitary paths. She notes common long gaps between projects for women, citing her own 12-year wait between features as typical, akin to intervals faced by and , underscoring systemic delays in opportunities. Overall, Mahoney prioritizes "leveling the field for future generations" over personal acclaim, advocating for sustained advocacy to address gatekeeping and enable broader access.

References

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