[3] In 1972, Wills and her partner, Gaby (Gabrielle) Antolovich, appeared in the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's documentary series Chequerboard, in which she made the point that tolerance differs from acceptance.
The groundbreaking documentary explored same sex relationships, psychiatric treatment as it was practiced at the time; religion and homosexuality; and the process involved in accepting one's sexuality and coming out.
Her ensuing article, "Intellectual Poofter Bashers" was carried in Camp Ink, C.A.M.P.’s newsletter, and distributed to attendants at a psychiatry conference organized by McConaghy in 1973.
[9] That same year, she did a nationwide tour of Australia and New Zealand, speaking in favor of amending the sexual assault crimes statutes and urging acceptance.
[11][8] She recognised that consciousness raising sessions were a means for women to develop self-confidence and explore the dynamics of power in their own lives as well as society,[12] as each individual woman's life was a microscopic view of how politics shaped their choices.
[16] Wills proposed that violence depicted in pornographic media might be related to backlash from the women's movement, but that the topic was too complex to limit causation to one facet of societal development.
[6] In 2009, she was a featured panelist at the 40th anniversary celebrations for Australia's gay pride[19] and in 2010, was honored along with Watson as a Community Hero in the annual Honour Awards of the AIDS Council of New South Wales (ACON).