
He died just one day before his 75th birthday, a cruel twist for a man whose music defined celebration itself. From Broadway beginnings in Dallas to the glittering heights of disco fame, Victor Willis became the unmistakable voice of an era. As the uniformed cop or naval officer at the heart of Village People, he turned “Y.M.C.A.,” “Macho Man,” and “In the Navy” into anthems that outlived the dance floors they were born on.
Behind the spectacle, his story was far from simple. He walked away from the band in 1980, then spent years fighting for the rights to the songs he helped create. Decades later, he returned, standing once more under the lights, even performing “Y.M.C.A.” at Donald Trump’s pre-inauguration rally in 2025. Now fans mourn a music pioneer whose voice, energy, and unapologetic joy became the soundtrack to countless lives—and will echo long after his final curtain.
