Nursing Home Residents Form a Biker
Gang
Lydia Schelteswoke up in her bed at Bethesda Retirement Center one morning with pinkish hair, a tattoo on
her arm and a hangover. Not a typical morning for the 90-year-old.
“Seniors are more fun than you’ll ever know,” she said.
Scheltes wasn't alone: Seven ladies and one dude – aged 65 to 97 – all had a similar hazy
look in their eyes after they hung out with bikers at the Evil Olive bar in Wicker
Park on Feb. 11.
Some of them were still wearing their own biker gear.
Bethesda’s residents usually spend their time knitting or quilting or
doing an activity typical of their age group, but they wanted something different for a change.
They often drive past the Evil Olive during day trips and fantasized about what goes on
inside.
One day Elizabeth Barrett, 68, asked their Life
Enrichment Director, Ruth Werstler, if they could check it
out.
“I did a little digging and found out it was a nightclub,” Werstler said. “But that didn’t
deter them.They still wanted to go.”
In fact, Barrett upped the ante: She suggest going out as bikers.
“It was all my idea,” Barrett says with a devious laugh. “We aren’t the regular type of
nursing home.”
Werstler indulged her crew and reached out to various people who could help transform the
retirement home crew into a boss biker gang. She recruited hairstylists, make-up artists, a professional costumer
and a tattoo artist from Artreach at Lillstreet to donate their time to make the ladies look fearsome.
About 100 people showed up to the club, including members of the Latino American
Motorcycle Association and Chicago’s Chapter of
A.B.A.T.E.
“These women were serious, man,” said Evil Olive General Manager Eric Bollard. “They
showed up with pink hair and skull caps. It was for real. … One woman walked straight up to the bar and ordered a
Dirty Martini. It was great.”
They even turned the event into a semi-fundraiser. Werstler is trying to raise $25,000 for
a touch screen computer system for the non-profit retirement home so that the women can learn and use the Internet.
The bikers who showed up pitched in about $250 toward the “Never-Too-Late.”
But it wasn’t the money that tickled the residents. It was the exhilaration of an evening
that felt like it “flew by in a nanosecond,” said 66-year-old Janet Kaplan.
Kaplan, who is wheelchair bound and admittedly extremely overweight, was
disappointed when she first arrived at the club because there were stairs by the entrance.
“I said, We’re not going to make it,” Kaplan said. “Then before I knew it a group of
bikers came and grabbed my wheelchair. All I saw was my head being tipped back and my feet were up in the air and
they had me in the club.”
The bikers gave the women club hats, and spent time chatting them up, flirting and even
dancing.
“One of our residents, Katie, just turned 97, and she got up with her walker and shook her
booty," Kaplan said. "She shook it good."
The one thing the women didn’t get a chance to do was ride on a motorcycle, because it was
too cold.
But that’s coming.
LAMA and A.B.A.T.E. members made plans to come by the residence center in the spring and
take the ladies for a ride.
“I want to be the first one on the bike,” said 90-year-old Scheltes.
They may ride straight back to Evil Olive.
“Man, those ladies were an awesome bunch," Boland said. "Everyone was so into it that
we’re thinking about arranging another party for them soon."
|