One of the basic rules of writing is āshow, donāt tellā when engaging a reader in a story. This rules seems logicalānot to mention easyāwhen it comes to writing a play. After all, it is a show.

When a play is about a writer, however, and the plot revolves around letters, it might be best to focus less on the obviousness of the show and focus more on the tell.
In Daddy Long Legs, the latest offering from PCPA, thereās a lot of telling going onābut it adds a lyrical beauty to an otherwise minimal production. The entire musical is carried by two actors: Ephie Aardema as Jerusha Abbot and Kevin Earley as Jervis Pendleton.
A library is the backdrop, standing in as a study, an orphanage, a college, and a farmhouse. the main props are several trunks and a few books. With such sparse resources, the talented production staff at PCPA does some amazing things.
The story, from the Tony and Olivier Award-winning director of Les Miserables John Caird, and music and lyrics by Paul Gordon, involves an orphan gifted with a college education by a wealthy benefactor: Jervis Pendleton, who wishes to remain anonymous and so goes by the name Mr. John Smith. He pays for tuition, room, and board in order for Jerusha to pursue a career as a writer. As a requirement of the funding, Jerusha is to send him letters once a month detailing her life, in much the way she would send them to her parents if they were alive. Jerusha sees Mr. Smith only once, the light casting a long shadow, so she decides to call him Daddy Long Legs in her letters.

Jervis, who had no intent of getting to know the subject of his generosity, reads the letters and is enthralled by her personality and wit. She tells him about her friends and her life in college; she asks him for advice and begs him to respond. With each letter, Jervis becomes even more intrigued with this young woman heās never seen.
Ā Jerusha, on the other hand, desperately wants to meet this man to whom she pours out her heart yet knows nothing about. To help her feel like she knows something about him, Jerusha creates an identity for him, imagining him as an old man, so she never suspects when Jervis comes to meet her as her best friendās uncle. After spending time with Jerusha, he falls for her but canāt figure out how to tell her he deceived her.
Aardema, as Jerusha, is absolutely charming. She expertly captures the wide-eyed wonder, vulnerability, and honesty of a young woman first seeing the world, moving the audience to delight when she writes with excitement about all the things sheās learned, and then alternately causing viewers to feel her pain when she expresses frustration that her benefactor knows everything about her but refuses to communicate with even one letter.
When Jerusha writes to Daddy about her feelings for Jervisānot knowing theyāre one and the sameāshe talks about how proper he is until he laughs like a boy, but then seems to feel embarrassed about it. Earley portrays that perfect balance between a sophisticated, formal businessman and a lovestruckāand jealousāyoung man.

The minimal set, by Olivier Award-winner David Farley, is used in interesting ways. The story unfolds over a four-year period, and handwriting is projected on a wall to highlight the passing of each year. The effect is also often used when letters are being sent back and forth. One style of handwriting is projected for Jerusha, another style for Jervis. Typewritten words are employed when Jervis sends off terse letters from Mr. Smithās āsecretary.ā
Lighting helps to set the scene from the college campus to the farm where Jerusha summers. The trunks that litter the stage not only represent the instability in Jerushaās life, but also hold the dresses into which she changes to represent her growth into a sophisticated academic.
You wonāt see it from the audience, but the production also features a live orchestra. Sitting behind the stage, the musicians deliver an emotionally moving soundtrack thatās so flawless, thereās no way of knowing it isnāt a recording.
Daddy Long Legs has a keen balance of romance, wit, emotion and humor. Itās a real feel-good story.
Arts Editor Shelly Cone wonders which is better, showing off or telling off? Contact her at scone@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Aug 9-16, 2012.

