Elia PowersNinety-one-year-old Bee Edwards has a motto...
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Elia Powers
Ninety-one-year-old Bee Edwards has a motto that helps explain the
frenetic pace of her life: “I’d rather wear out than rest out,” she
repeats.
She takes art classes. She paints. She builds miniature
dollhouses. She exercises.
Hers isn’t a stroll-through-the-mall type of workout, either.
Edwards, a 50-year Newport Beach resident, does a strenuous Pilates
routine for one hour, twice a week, and for two hours each Wednesday
in a room with a 180-degree view of Fashion Island.
She leans, twists, lifts, reaches and rows on state-of-the-art
equipment. No sweat.
“The workout has helped me a lot,” she said. “It loosens up
everything in my body and helps with my circulation and general
well-being.”
The training room has a special meaning to Edwards. It was where
her husband, Edwards Cinemas founder James Edwards, once had his
office. He built up a chain of theaters around Los Angeles in the
1930s and moved the family to Newport Beach in the 1950s.
When James Edwards died eight years ago, Bee Edwards said she
remembered one of his favorite sayings: “You have to live life to its
fullest.”
So she vowed that day to make a lifestyle change.
“That’s when I grew up,” she said. “He was the one who took care
of everything. It was time for me to become self-sufficient.”
Bee Edwards had worked for periods of her life and had worked out
sporadically, but she mostly considered herself a homebody.
In her mid-80s, she began to experience pain in her legs and
knees, and underwent physical therapy. It got so that she had to walk
with a cane.
“I thought to myself, ‘I don’t like this,’” she said. “So I threw
it away and said, ‘I don’t want that anymore.’”
That’s when Edwards joined the Body Design fitness center, where
her daughter-in-law, Patty Edwards, was already a member. She became
the oldest member at the center by about 20 years.
Her commitment to regular exercise motivated her daughter, Carole
Ann Ruoff, and her granddaughter, Glenna Ruoff, to join Body Design.
“I wouldn’t have gone if it weren’t for her,” said Glenna Ruoff,
who had scoliosis. “A lot of people give up at her age. She’s never
taken that attitude.”
Amy Fischer, a physical therapist at Body Design, has trained with
Edwards for about a year. She works Edwards through a rotation that
consists of Pilates machines, weightlifting and exercise-bicycle
riding.
Fischer said Edwards never complains and never misses an
appointment.
“She’s always motivated because she believes in keeping her body
healthy,” Fischer said. “She handles the workout better than some of
my 30-year-olds.”
Edwards no longer walks with a cane. She moves with ease and has
model posture.
She socializes with her relatives as they move through their
workouts. And she considers herself blessed to have three children,
nine grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren all living in Newport
Beach.
“She is an inspiration to all of us,” Carole Ann Ruoff said. “I
can’t keep up with her. She is busy all the time. That’s what keeps
her young.”
* ELIA POWERS is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
He may be reached at (714) 966-4623 or by e-mail at
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