Los Angeles Times

STILL CHEERFUL

After the dark years of AIDS, West Hollywood Cheerleade­rs now enlighten about past struggles but continue the laughter

- By Hailey Branson-Potts

Nicklaus Fox hadn’t spent much time around gay people. He grew up on a Montana cattle ranch, learned in a one-room schoolhous­e — and shocked his parents when he came out of the closet.

“You’re going to die of AIDS,” he recalled them saying.

It was the early 1990s, and all Fox knew about homosexual­ity was what he heard on the news: There was a deadly “gay cancer,” and there seemed to be a lot of gays in California.

So, he hightailed it to the West Coast, where a friend dragged him to the Long Beach Pride parade. And that’s when he saw them: Huge hair. Gaudy makeup. Sass. Glitter.

They were the West Hollywood Cheerleade­rs, drag queens raising money for AIDS — and, of all things, making people laugh.

“These guys were just so comfortabl­e with who they were, dressed in drag with these crazy wigs,” Fox said. “I thought, ‘Oh my god, I want to be a cheerleade­r.’ ”

For Fox — a veterinari­an fighting years of internaliz­ed homophobia — the path to self-acceptance came with a pair of pompoms and a public spotlight.

The West Hollywood Cheerleade­rs formed in 1986 when 13 gay men began dressing up as cheerleade­rs to visit people in hospitals dying of AIDS. Even as their own friends died, they believed it was OK to smile.

Life in West Hollywood — and in the gay community as a whole — has changed radically since those dark days. The AIDS crisis has lessened, and acceptance of gays in larger society has increased greatly.

But the cheerleade­rs remain a fixture of local LGBT life, 30 years after the group formed,

[Cheerleade­rs, though their role has changed. Now, they offer a history lesson to younger people about the struggles of the past.

The members go by cheeky drag names such as CoCo Dependent, Ivy Rockafella and Ida Slapter.

One man, Phil Rodriguez, goes by Sissy Pantz. He was called “sissy” as a kid. So he embroidere­d the word on the back of his cheer uniform.

Fox took the name Helen Back. As in “to hell and back.”

Tim Peterson came out at 18 in 1985 — the same year actor Rock Hudson died of AIDS and President Ronald Reagan first mentioned the disease publicly.

Peterson moved to West Hollywood, he said, because he knew he’d find gay people there. He’d go out to the bars, and the nights often would be interrupte­d by the WeHo Cheerleade­rs, bursting in, causing a ruckus. Soon, he wanted in.

“I was nervous as heck,” he said. “But they took me.”

A technology director for a healthcare company, Peterson drives more than 200 miles round-trip from his Palm Springs home every week to coach cheer practices in West Hollywood Park. On a recent night, he stood before the men in Tshirts and athletic shorts practicing a routine to the 1983 hit “The Safety Dance” by Men Without Hats.

His blond hair tied back in a low bun, Peterson led them like a conductor, waving his arms and punctuatin­g the beat.

“It has to look really cute!” he said. “It has to have that cheerleade­r punch. Swing! And pull. Swing! And pull. Focus on sharp arm movements!”

By 2008, Fox had been a cheerleade­r for several years. But he was estranged from his family and, deep down, still deeply ashamed that he was gay.

He was depressed, broke and hooked on drugs. He injected a whole vial of insulin into his leg, hoping it would kill him. As he faded, he sent a garbled text message to one of his veterinary clients, asking her to care for his pets. She sensed something was wrong. When paramedics found him, Fox was in a coma.

He spent several weeks in a psychiatri­c ward, checked in to rehab and got sober — then tested positive for HIV.

At the height of his addictions, Fox had drifted away from the cheerleade­rs. But suddenly the HIV-awareness messages he’d been promoting as Helen Back, cheerleade­r, became personal.

In recent years, HIV diagnoses have increased among young gay and bisexual men, fueled in part by drug use, inadequate safe-sex education and a low perception of risk by a generation with no memory of the AIDS epidemic, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“We’re seeing a generation of youth becoming infected because they don’t have the history to fall back on, with people dying from HIV,” Fox said. “They think, ‘Oh, I can just take a pill; it’s not that big a deal.’ ”

He wants to persuade them to make better decisions than he did.

William Smith sat at a picnic table at the Glendale Sports Complex, a veritable arsenal of makeup spread in front of him. He’d worked a 4 a.m. barista shift at an Apple Valley Starbucks and had to do “speed drag” to become the cheerleade­r Patty Cakes.

It was the day of the Drag Queen World Series, the cheerleade­rs’ annual AIDS fundraisin­g softball game against their rivals in rouge, the Los Angeles Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence.

“Girl, are you seriously caking on your face right now?” Rodriguez, AKA Sissy Pantz, asked Smith, an eyebrow raised as Smith contoured his cheeks. Another man came over to borrow Smith’s deep red lipstick, waving at his children and husband playing nearby.

As a volunteer walked through the crowd handing out safe-sex kits, a drag queen emcee started things off by yelling, “I am declaring the bathrooms gender free today!”

Steve Siler, the cheerleade­rs’ hunky, shirtless bat boy, stood on the first-base line, wearing short-shorts and a waist apron holding a purple can of Aquanet hairspray. He sprayed the cheerleade­rs down.

“How flammable are they? Very. By the end of the game, I wouldn’t smoke a cigarette anywhere near them,” he said.

When the game ended, home plate was covered in glitter. The cheerleade­rs lost — but, they said, they sure looked pretty. Fox, squeezed into multiple girdles, couldn’t get the participan­t medal over his wig. Another sweating cheerleade­r whipped out a silicon bra insert.

Laughing in the crowd was the family of Enrique Ornelas, a longtime cheerleade­r called Tallula who died of liver disease in October.

Ornelas learned he was HIV positive in 2009 and, as a cheerleade­r, worked hard to fight the stigma of the disease, said his partner, Peter Riddall. The cheerleade­rs visited in the hospital just before he died.

“It was very important to him that people knew that just because he gave them a hug they weren't going to get infected, or if you gave him a kiss,” said his sister Adriana Ornelas Perez. “He was just a normal person with a disease that is still misunderst­ood.”

Days after his death, Ornelas’ family marched in the Palm Springs Pride parade with the cheerleade­rs. They carried his platform leather boots, filled with roses.

On June 12, the morning of the L.A. Pride parade, Peterson was getting ready to do his makeup when he heard that someone had walked into a gay nightclub in Orlando and killed 49 people. He sent a text message to Fox: They needed to be extra vigilant for the squad that day.

Under gray skies, just after officials announced the arrest of a heavily armed man who’d planned to come to the parade, a volunteer warned the cheerleade­rs: “The fundamenta­lists, they will be shouting. Just ignore them.”

But stepping onto Santa Monica Boulevard in matching white sneakers, “The Safety Dance” blaring, the cheerleade­rs were all pep. The crowd danced along.

“I love men in uniform!” one cheerleade­r shouted playfully at one of the police officers along the route.

Fox wore a massive blond wig, bright blue eye shadow and pearls. He took selfies with people in the crowd and high-fived his fellow cheerleade­rs.

His pompoms bouncing as he strode down the street, the boy from a cattle ranch in Montana smiled at no one — and everyone.

 ?? Photograph­s by Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? NICKLAUS FOX, as Helen Back, in L.A.’s pride parade, above. William Smith, top left, is Patty Cakes. Tim Peterson fixes eyelashes.
Photograph­s by Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times NICKLAUS FOX, as Helen Back, in L.A.’s pride parade, above. William Smith, top left, is Patty Cakes. Tim Peterson fixes eyelashes.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? Photograph­s by Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? IDA STAPEDHER, left, Sal Ianniello and Kari Okee, all of West Hollywood Cheerleade­rs, march in L.A.’s pride parade June 12.
Photograph­s by Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times IDA STAPEDHER, left, Sal Ianniello and Kari Okee, all of West Hollywood Cheerleade­rs, march in L.A.’s pride parade June 12.
 ??  ?? JARRED HANSON, foreground, leads the West Hollywood Cheerleade­rs in the parade. The group formed in 1986 to visit people in hospitals dying of AIDS.
JARRED HANSON, foreground, leads the West Hollywood Cheerleade­rs in the parade. The group formed in 1986 to visit people in hospitals dying of AIDS.
 ??  ?? NICKLAUS FOX, as cheerleade­r Helen Back, is kissed by an admirer before marching in the parade.
NICKLAUS FOX, as cheerleade­r Helen Back, is kissed by an admirer before marching in the parade.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States