Jerry A. Mills was an openly gay cartoonist known for his comic stripPoppers, which is credited as one of the first comic strips to develop multi-dimensional gay characters. Scholars have stated that while earlier comics had relied on stereotypes such as the nelly queen or muscleman, Mills presented his characters with lives beyond the stereotypes. His work is also credited as having helped shape comics for the LGBTQ+ community and its members.
Career
Mills created ad hoc cartoons and wrote an eight-page history of gays in comics for the first Meatmen anthology. In the earlier part of the 1980's, Mills worked in the subscriptions department of In Touch for Men, an adult magazine company aimed at gay men. John Calendo, the magazine's editor and friend of Mills, promoted the artist to a regular comic strip. The two intended for the strip to add variety to the regularly scheduled comic content, to which Mills created Poppers. Mills began writing the series in 1982 and by the mid 1980s a translated edition of the strip was published in Gai Pied Hebdo, a French-language gay magazine, and in the Japanese magazine Barazoku. Reprints of the strip also appeared sporadically in Gay Comix under the editorship of Howard Cruse, Robert Triptow, and Andy Mangels. The strip's title refers to "poppers", alkyl nitrites which were commonly used recreationally in the gay community. Poppers was lauded for having complex characters who were more than gay stereotypes. Poppers focused on Billy, a West Hollywood muscleboy, and his sidekick Yves, a big-hearted nebbish who offered good advice and caution for his glamorous friend. Yves always went along for the ride with Billy, commenting on the action, a function he took over from a witty crab louse that lived on Billy's pubic hair in the first few strips. When Mills moved to the classifieds department of Advocate Men, Poppers also moved to Advocate Men and was published sporadically. By the beginning of the 1990s Mills' health was deteriorating, as he developed complications associated with HIV infection, and in his final few years he worked less and less. He did, however, attend ACT UP demonstrations in Los Angeles and design posters for the offshoot organization Queer Nation, concerned with gay visibility. Mills died of his illness in January 1993, survived by his partner Sal Lucarello. Though overshadowed by contemporaries such as Tim Barela and Howard Cruse, both of whom also worked with continuing characters in comic strip format, scholars have stated that Mills made a substantial contribution to gay cartooning. In particular, the "Chelsea Boys" strip by Glen Hanson and Allan Neuwirth is influenced by Mills.
AIDS themes
In his work Mills focused heavily on the AIDS crisis, as mass producedcomic books such as Meatmen allowed for a larger audience and greater exposure to the epidemic's social issues. Critics have argued that by doing this, Mills was able to make comics a more educational based literary art, rather than a plain read.
Mills was openly gay and in his later years had a partner, Sal Lucarello. During the 1990s Mills's health was steadily deteriorating due to severe complications associated with HIV, causing him to work less and less. He remained active with social issues and was able to attend the 'ACT UP' demonstrations in Los Angeles, California. He also designed posters for Queer Nation, an activist organization aimed at protecting those who felt threatened by anti-gay violence. Mills died on January 28, 1993. Sal Lucarello.