Marisa
Chafetz for The New York Times
‘The
Queen of Versailles’ Puts Her Life in the Hands of a ‘Wicked’ Diva
A 2012
documentary asked if Jacqueline Siegel was a benefactor or victim of American
greed. A new musical starring Kristin Chenoweth raises doubts.
Zachary
Small
By
Zachary Small
Aug. 29,
2025
Updated
8:52 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/29/theater/queen-of-versailles-chenoweth-broadway.html
When the
cameras rolled, Jacqueline Siegel glided through the Metropolitan Museum of
Art’s period rooms like she owned them — poised, polished and attuned to the
quiet performance of being watched. She paused before an embellished wooden
table once owned by Marie Antoinette, running her eyes along its glossy
surface, before letting a smile break through. “I wish this museum was a
store,” she said, half joking, half dreaming.
Off-camera,
the shimmer dulled as the 59-year-old former pageant winner’s shoulders drooped
ever so slightly. The self-styled “Queen of Versailles,” who was immortalized
in a 2012 documentary about her family’s stalled effort to build a replica of
the French palace in the Orlando suburbs, was suddenly less a performer and
more a person. She admitted to being nervous about the photo shoot, more than
she had predicted after a decade chasing the spotlight of reality television.
The
documentary had shown the beauty queen in the half-finished ballrooms and
boudoirs of her mansion, planning for the day when she could add a Benihana
restaurant and ice rink to its sprawling blueprint. But after her billionaire
husband, David, spent millions on construction, the 2008 financial crisis
forced him into a fight for the survival of his timeshare empire. The family
retained control of the house and have spent the intervening years crawling
toward the finish line of construction.
Siegel’s
excesses and tragedies are being restaged at the St. James Theater on Broadway
this fall (previews are set to start on Oct. 8) in a new musical with songs by
the “Wicked” composer Stephen Schwartz and a book by Lindsey Ferrentino.
Kristin Chenoweth will step into Siegel’s stilettos to re-enact the most
infamous tableaux: a dead pet lizard, the mansion filled with dog poop. (F.
Murray Abraham will play her husband.) But the show also digs deeper, tracing
Siegel’s working-class origins and the 2015 opioid overdose that killed her
daughter Victoria.
A
production image of Kristin Chenoweth, standing while wearing a short pink
dress and holding shopping bags. There’s a screen with an American flag and a
Wall Street street sign, and people standing or sitting while looking off to
the left.
“We have
talked about it as a cautionary tale from Day 1,” Ferrentino said she has told
Siegel, explaining how the blond glamazon exemplifies the pernicious “more is
more” mentality at a time of rising income inequality. “The desire for more
includes a desire for more attention — and a desire to tell your story,”
Ferrentino said.
Siegel
never flinches when others repeat this explanation. “I hope to inspire people,”
she responds. However, she understands her role as the show’s antihero: She’s
an example of what happens when one’s delusions of grandeur become attainable.
But as the musical heads to Broadway and she prepares to finally move into her
Versailles palace, the delusion seems to be cracking. It has been only four
months since her husband died of cancer and her sister, Jessica Mallery,
overdosed on cocaine laced with fentanyl — on the same day. (Mallery died a few
days later.)
After the
photo shoot with Chenoweth wrapped in the period rooms, Siegel requested one
more location. The group followed her to the museum’s sculpture gallery where
she posed underneath a statue by the 18th-century Italian sculptor Antonio
Canova. The artwork depicted Perseus holding the severed head of Medusa. Siegel
chose to stand underneath the snake-haired gorgon; she smiled and gestured
toward the decapitation like Vanna White revealing a vowel on “Wheel of
Fortune.”
Was it
just a silly tourist picture or did she see herself in the monster?
The Girl
From Endwell
Siegel
tried to become a chorus girl on Broadway in the late 1980s, dancing for
casting directors for “Cats” and “The Will Rogers Follies” before making a name
for herself in beauty pageants and modeling campaigns. The dream of being
onstage vanished after she moved to Florida in the 1990s, married a billionaire
and began raising eight children.
Several
years after the “Queen of Versailles” documentary was released, Ferrentino was
pursuing an adaptation; the stage director Michael Arden had expressed interest
with the hopes of attaching Schwartz and Chenoweth.
“Jackie
is a harbinger of where America is heading,” Arden said during a phone
interview, describing Siegel as a character that would allow Chenoweth to flex
her comedic chops and dramatic range. “The role might just seem funny, but
there is deep pathos underneath it.”
Ferrentino
was also drawn to the idea for personal reasons: The Siegels had purchased
several properties in her Florida hometown, Cocoa Beach.
“They
bought the pier and hotel,” said Ferrentino, who arranged a meeting with Siegel
in 2017 to discuss the possibility of a show. She assured Siegel that she would
not be written as a punchline. “I’m not interested in putting her onstage and
tearing her apart,” the playwright continued. “But there is a crucial
difference between putting someone onstage and glorifying that person.”
Siegel
said their encounter was more like a celebrity sighting, with Ferrentino
approaching her on the beach like a fan girl. “I don’t know how she recognized
me,” Siegel recalled. “I wasn’t even wearing makeup.”
That
period in her life was admittedly a haze. Victoria’s death in 2015 shook the
family and reconfigured Siegel’s image of herself. Siegel was busy fulfilling
her daughter’s last wish to publish the contents of her personal diary, which
were eventually released with a text message in the introduction that Victoria
had written in case she overdosed.
“I’ve
never shown anyone my journal but there’s no one else I would rather pass it
onto than you. My business is everyone else’s business now and I’m OK with that
mom ❤️ hey maybe you can publish my teenage
journal and bump up your career,” the note said. “If it worked out I’d be so
proud of u. I’ll always be proud of you.”
Siegel
agreed to Ferrentino’s musical without asking permission from her family. “I
had already made up my mind,” the queen said. She even invested in the
production, explaining that Victoria once told her she would win “a Grammy or
something.” (She figures she meant a Tony.) And though the creative team said
she had no artistic control, Siegel would still profit from her story if it’s a
success on Broadway.
But her
relationship to the documentary’s creator, Lauren Greenfield, was complicated.
Shortly after the movie’s release, David Siegel sued for defamation, claiming
“The Queen of Versailles” was “more fictional than real.” He ultimately lost
the lawsuit and was ordered to pay $750,000 in legal fees, according to
Greenfield, who had continued to travel through Europe with Jackie to promote
the film while their lawyers battled.
“Jackie
is quite different from when I first met her,” said Greenfield, a producer on
the musical. “She is still the same person, but she doesn’t have that innocence
anymore.”
Greenfield
attributed the shift to Siegel’s time on reality television, which has included
an episode of “Celebrity Wife Swap,” her own series called “The Queen of
Versailles Reigns Again” and several appearances on the “Below Deck” franchise.
She became more aware of the camera and less afraid to toy with the audience’s
perception of her as a materialistic trophy wife.
The
musical introduces Siegel in a negative light. Chenoweth steps onstage with a
number called “Because We Can,” in which she revels in the conspicuous
consumption of floors studded with precious gems and walls covered in gold. But
the portrayal softens as the show dives into her childhood in a working-class
family from Endwell, N.Y., a bedroom community for IBM employees where she
spends her days looking into rich people’s windows and watching “Lifestyles of
the Rich and Famous.” When her engineering degree and entry job at IBM fail to
meet her standards, she searches for other levers of wealth and happiness.
“Here
lies Jackie Mallery. Minimum wage salary,” Chenoweth sings in the role. “With a
tiny life and great big dreams she has no clue how to achieve.”
There is
a sound cue in the show described in the script as a “pong,” which represents
Siegel’s ability to constantly bounce between obstacles and opportunities. (The
sound is also a reference to her love of the video game Pong.) It plays when
she leaves her IBM job; when she leaves her first husband, Ron Solomon, whom
she called abusive; and again when she meets her second husband, David, who
compliments her daughter Victoria for having a royal name.
She has
continued to pingpong through life, surviving hardships by switching her focus.
After
Victoria’s death, she established a nonprofit called Victoria’s Voice
Foundation to promote drug awareness and prevention. She worked with the Obama
administration to help pass the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act in
2016 and appeared in the White House more recently with President Trump, a
friend of her late husband, when he signed the Halt Fentanyl Act.
“I am
tired of death,” Siegel said, explaining that watching the musical was like
being reunited with the departed members of her family. “When I saw Victoria
onstage, I felt like my daughter came back to life and I started crying.”
She views
her life as part of a divine plan that includes fame, fortune and now a
pint-size soprano named Kristin Chenoweth.
“When I
got married, my husband started designing Versailles on a napkin,” Siegel said.
“It was his dream, not mine. And I have been reflecting a lot since my husband
passed away: Why did God put this in my path when I didn’t even ask for it?”
Switching
from a pilsner beer to a piping kettle of mint tea at the Met Museum’s balcony
lounge, Siegel outlined a new vision for Versailles without her husband. She
wanted to use the 90,000-square-foot mansion to draw guests into fund-raising
events for issues like health care and drug addiction. She rationalized that a
high-profile musical would only extend her reach to do good in the world.
“This
Broadway show is going to help me save lives,” Siegel said.
Palace
Intrigue
About two
years ago, Chenoweth made a pilgrimage to Orlando, driving beyond the palm
trees to the quiet shores of Butler Lake where Versailles stood, almost
finished, in the dust bowl of construction machines.
Both the
actor and her subject had eagerly anticipated this meeting. Broadway musicals
overwhelmingly focus on historical or fictional events; it’s exceptionally rare
for an actress to cultivate a long relationship with a subject that she will
embody through pop ballads and box steps. Especially one who’s investing in her
project.
Chenoweth
arrived at the mansion to an illustrious surprise. Siegel had written the
actor’s name in lights as if it were spelled out on a Broadway marquee. The
former pageant queen was wearing a long, pink Balmain dress, which Chenoweth
complimented.
“The next
day, she had it delivered to me,” Chenoweth said as she recalled the meeting
over tea at the Met Museum.
Siegel
added with a smile: “It was the last one in the country.”
Chenoweth
said, “My immediate reaction was that this was going to be a friend of mine.”
Not only
is Chenoweth making her return to Broadway for the first time in nearly a
decade, she is also making her debut as a theater producer. “The Queen of
Versailles” is the 57-year-old actor’s chance to prove herself to the business
community.
“I don’t
think anyone should ever invest in anything on Broadway expecting a profit,”
Chenoweth said, briefly pausing to gleefully acknowledge the irony of her next
statement. “Of course that’s my goal with this show.”
But she
has tasted success more often than most actors on Broadway, originating the
role of Glinda in “Wicked” and gaining mainstream recognition in television
shows like “The West Wing,” “Pushing Daisies” and “Glee.” In addition to her
steady film career, the Tony and Emmy winner has also gained a large following
on TikTok, where she occasionally sings her old repertoire, belts high notes
from a public toilet and discusses her love of 7/11 Slurpees.
In some
ways, Chenoweth has been waiting for “The Queen of Versailles” since debuting
in “Wicked” over two decades ago, when Schwartz, the composer, promised to
write her next musical. It wasn’t until 2015 that he hinted about the
opportunity — and then another five years before they started to collaborate on
the project.
“I did
question how we would make this work,” Chenoweth said, but then she saw the
potential of Siegel as a larger-than-life personality who came from a small
town just like her. “I love my home state, I am still an Oklahoma girl, but I
did have a dream of getting out and making my own money.”
There was
an immediate connection between the women during their meeting at Versailles,
which was scheduled as a photo shoot to promote the musical’s world premiere in
Boston last year. Siegel was understandably nervous about meeting the actor
portraying her, and Chenoweth could sense it.
And as
Siegel continued to show support for the musical, Chenoweth became more
nervous. During one of the last readings, she pulled Siegel aside and told her,
“As we tell your story, I just don’t want you to be hurt by it or be saddened
by it.”
“I
remember that,” Siegel said, bidding for the actor to continue.
“We are
telling your story and there are going to be lots of reminders for you. And she
just gently and beautifully gave me permission to not worry about it,”
Chenoweth said, adding that Siegel told her, simply, “Just play me.”
Of
course, it’s not so simple.
When a
House Is Not a Home
The
documentary ended with Siegel realizing how little she knew about her husband’s
finances after David revealed that Versailles was headed toward foreclosure.
The couple vowed to start living within their means, just like many other
Americans did following the Great Recession. But soon after the timeshare
business recovered and the family fortune was to some extent restored, the
Siegels continued to build even in the face of Victoria’s death.
“The well
of grief is so deep,” said Ferrentino, who thought it was a uniquely American
problem to put one’s entire identity into a symbol of wealth. “What this house
has come to represent — the scale of her ambition, the scale of every dream she
has ever had for her family — when that well inside you is so deep, no building
will ever contain that.”
She
continued: “I witnessed it over the years. They would finish sections of the
house that could have been move-in ready but then decided they wanted something
bigger and better. They would take it out and start again.”
Siegel is
now facing the reality of Versailles’ completion alone. She will take her five
dogs to the completed palace, but most of her children are living in different
parts of the country. The bedroom planned for Victoria has been converted to a
prayer altar. “Her spirit can stay with me in the master bedroom,” she said.
When
asked about her plans for the move, the widow winced. “It’s going to be sad,”
she said. “I don’t have any immediate desire to move in, plus all my memories
are at my old house. I still have my husband’s memories there. His toothbrushes
are right there.”
When our
afternoon at the Met was finished and we walked toward the exit, I thought back
to Siegel’s playful pose underneath Medusa’s severed head. Was it just a bit of
camp from a woman who has spent years performing for the cameras? A little nod
to the “off with her head” style of execution that the other queen of
Versailles faced during the French Revolution?
Siegel
later told me that she was attracted to the statue because it reminded her of a
fountain she owns that includes a sculpture of the sea god Poseidon. I told her
that the two mythological figures are connected; in some version of the myth,
Medusa is transformed from a beautiful maiden into a monster after Poseidon
seduces her.
The story
reflects a recurring theme in Greek mythology, where women bear the brunt of
divine conflicts. And Medusa is a mythological figure who has been recast for
centuries: vilified by some, worshiped by others, always frozen in the moment
of her undoing. Perhaps Siegel sees herself there, a woman who is both a
spectacle and a survivor, staring back at a world that has already decided what
she is.
When I
told her all this, she said it was possible that fate led her to the statue.
But she herself, didn’t know why. She said, “I forgot the story, in all
honesty.”
Zachary
Small is a Times reporter writing about the art world’s relationship to money,
politics and technology.



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