Mills is credited with having been a staunch and outspoken supporter of equal rights for African Americans, with her signature song "I'm a Little Blackbird" being a plea for racial equality. During her life she broke many racial barriers. After her death,
Duke Ellington memorialized Mills in his composition
Black Beauty.
Fats Waller also memorialized Mills in a song,
Bye Bye Florence, recorded in
Camden, New Jersey, on November 1, 1927, featuring Bert Howell on vocals with organ by Waller;
Florence was recorded with Juanita Stinette Chappell on vocals and Waller on organ. Other songs recorded the same day include
You Live On in Memory and
Gone but Not Forgotten—Florence Mills, neither of which were composed by Waller. English composer
Constant Lambert - also a friend and champion of Duke Ellington - saw Florence Mills when she performed in
Dover Street to Dixie at the
London Pavilion in 1923, and again when she visited London a second time in 1926-7 for her show
Blackbirds. On her death Lambert immediately wrote the piano piece
Elegiac Blues in tribute, orchestrating it the following year. The rising triplet near the beginning (bar 8) is a quote from the fanfare that opened
Blackbirds. The Florence Mills Theatre opened on 8 December 1930 at 3511 South Central Avenue,
Los Angeles. The 740-seat theater was commissioned by Sam Kramer. On opening night almost 1,000 people lined the street, with 10 police officers holding back the crowds. A residential building at 267 Edgecombe Avenue in
Harlem's
Sugar Hill neighborhood is named after her. Mills was pictured on a postage stamp issued by the island of
Grenada in honor of "The Birth of the Silver Screen". A biography by Bill Egan entitled
Florence Mills: Harlem: Jazz Queen was published in 2006, and a children's book,
Baby Flo: Florence Mills Lights Up the Stage, by Alan Schroeder, was published by Lee and Low in 2012. Mills is referenced in the 2023 video game ''
Marvel's Spider-Man 2'', with a picture of her and a pair of her shoes appearing in a musical heritage museum. ==See also==