Village People Singer Victor Willis Dies at 74
Washington (United States) (AFP) – Victor Willis, lead singer of the disco group Village People whose hit “Y.M.C.A.” became a fixture at rallies for US President Donald Trump, has died, his spouse said in a Facebook post on Wednesday. He was 74.
“It is with profound sadness that I must announce the death of my husband, VICTOR WILLIS. Victor passed away on Tuesday June 30, 2026 as a result of a short, but aggressive illness,” the post on Willis’s official page said.
The Texas-born musician co-founded Village People and co-wrote hits including “Y.M.C.A.”, “In the Navy” and “Macho Man” that swept the world’s dancefloors in the late 1970s.
Trump expressed his condolences on Wednesday and said Willis will be sorely missed.
“He was a great and happy guy who loved that I used his groups song, YMCA, at my Rallies. It became a ‘monster’ hit, again, 30 years after its original launch,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.
“We will think of Victor every time YMCA is played, like today, and all throughout this July Fourth Birthday week,” he added, referring to the 250th anniversary of US independence this weekend.
The group, which began in 1977 when Willis accepted an invitation from producer Jacques Morali and his business partner Henri Belolo, eventually grew to a lineup of six or seven performers.

File/The band Village People (Victor Willis, Randy Jones, David Hodo, Felipe Rose and Glenn Hughes) are in New York to present their new record. (Photo by jean-Louis Atlan/Sygma via Getty Images)
“I had a dream that you sang lead vocals on an album I produced, and it went very, very big… I’ll make you a star,” Morali reportedly told Willis, according to the band’s website.
With their flamboyant costumes and choreography, the group became a pop culture phenomenon, targeting disco’s large gay audience with camp fantasy characters of butch builders, bikers, cowboys and soldiers.
“Macho Types Wanted for World-Famous Disco Group — Must Dance and Have a Moustache,” read an early ad seeking members to bolster the group’s lineup, according to its website.
The Village People name was long assumed to be a reference to Greenwich Village in New York, which was the center of the city’s gay scene in the 1970s.
Known for his signature “cop” and “admiral” stage personas, Willis left the group in 1980.
He struggled with drug addiction and took a plea deal over cocaine possession in 2006.
Willis rejoined Village People in 2017 following a victory in a copyright lawsuit which allowed him to reclaim part-ownership of some of the band’s biggest hits.
Trump rally favorite
“Y.M.C.A.”, whose lyrics urge “young men” to head to the Young Men’s Christian Association in New York, became an anthem for the LGBTQ community and beyond.
In 2020, the song was added to the National Recording Registry by the US Library of Congress, as well as the Grammy Hall of Fame.
But some say the song has been co-opted by the American right wing following its use at rallies and events supporting Trump.
The president developed his own trademark dance to accompany the song — a stiff shuffle of the hips and fist bumps at waist-high level.

File/American Disco vocalist Victor Willis, of the group the Village People, performs onstage at the Chicago Stadium, Chicago, Illinois, June 21, 1979. (Photo by Paul Natkin/Getty Images)
Willis has rejected interpretations of the song as a gay anthem, saying in 2024 that it was a “false assumption based on the fact that my writing partner was gay, and some (not all) of Village People were gay, and that the first Village People album was totally about gay life”.
The band performed “Y.M.C.A.” at a Trump rally in January 2025, before the Republican was inaugurated for his second term.
Willis said at the time: “Let’s give President Trump a chance, regardless of what you may have thought about him in the past.”
“Let’s see what he’s going to do moving forward and if he does things to restrict LGBTQ rights, Village People will be the first to speak out,” he said.