Image copyright Victor Willis World Image caption Victor Willis has been through rehab and legal battles since leaving Village People

Victor Willis was the traffic cop in 1970s pop group Village People - and sang lead vocals and co-wrote their hits. After winning back the right to use their name from his former bandmates, he's making a fresh start.

Village People still have one of the most instantly recognisable images in pop.

Created in 1977 in New York by French producers Jacques Morali and Henri Belolo alongside Willis, their characters - the cop, the GI, the construction worker, the cowboy, the Native American and the biker - were the public face for colossal worldwide hits like Go West, In The Navy and YMCA.

Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Village People at the height of their fame

They sold around 100 million albums and singles, but Willis quit at the peak of the band's fame in 1979.

That was shortly before their universally derided film Can't Stop the Music, which coincided with disco music falling out of fashion and the end of the band's hits.

In the years that followed, the remaining members continued to tour under the Village People name, frequently replacing members (in fact, more than 20 different people have played the roles) while affection for their songs enjoyed a renaissance.

YMCA became a regular sports stadium anthem and their image was absorbed into popular culture, being pastiched by everyone from U2 to Despicable Me.

Since leaving the group, Willis's personal struggles with substance abuse led him to rehab. Since then, he's been focused on reclaiming his legacy.

Image copyright Official Village People

In recent years, he won a series of lengthy legal battles to own the copyright for the hits he co-wrote and sang, claiming millions in unpaid royalties and wresting the name Village People back from his one-time bandmates.

He's just finished touring the UK, headlining the 40 Years of Disco arena tour, and says now was the right time return to fronting the band.

"There was nothing I could do about it until this legal stuff was straightened out," he says.

"And this just happened to be at the 40-year anniversary of Village People. Everything seemed to fall into place where I could say, 'OK, it's time for me to take over the group again.'

"Not a reunion, but to reboot the group. To have to get new characters. Then I have to get a band like when Jacques and I first sat down and decided we're going to create this Village People thing.

"We have to have a band so that people can know that this is not a 'Milli Vanilli' thing. This is something that's live. This is real. And this what I came back to do."

'Straight, gay, whatever...'

The image of Village People reflected the gay culture that emerged from New York clubs in the mid-1970s, but Willis explains the songs he wrote were concerned with universal themes rather than specifically targeting an LGBT audience.

"My situation with Jacques was that we would write music and I would make my lyrics, which they call 'double entendre', which means that you can take it any way you want it. Gay people? If you liked it, fine! Straight people? If you liked it, fine! It doesn't matter.

"There were certain songs, which cannot be denied, that were generated toward that particular lifestyle, because that was Jacques' lifestyle. But that's not what Village People represents.

"Village People represents people, period. Any lifestyle. Male, female, straight, gay, whatever. So when I would write lyrics, instead of saying 'he' or 'she', I would say 'everybody'.

"I would just leave it open so that anybody could interpret it to fit the way they wanted it to fit them."

He explains that in YMCA, Village People's most famous hit, he was telling the "story" about his own experiences when he was young.

"It was about the urban lifestyle of when I grew up going to the Y and playing basketball and hanging out. That was my interpretation of it. I didn't know anything about the lifestyle of other people that go there.

"For me, YMCA was about, like the last line says, 'They can start you back on your way'. A person could go stay at the Ritz Carlton or the Hilton, or these expensive hotels. But if you don't have that kind of money, you might have to go to the Y."

It's been nearly 40 years since Willis took went on tour singing Village People songs, but he believes his long battle has been worth it.

"It's what they call perseverance," he says.

"I've been from the Bucket of Blood to the White House. I've been from the top to the bottom.

"And I had to hold on to my dream that I would one day be able to do - and continue to do - what it is that I love. And that is to make music and make people happy.

"I didn't know 40 years ago that people were going to still like YMCA when I wrote it. It was written just for sharing the enjoyment of the music.

"So it's mindblowing that it has lasted and that people still love it, but I didn't think that they wouldn't.

"The future holds trying, attempting and hoping to be able to bring more music to the world that will be enjoyable and will last as long as YMCA has."

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