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| Glenn Close | Sarah Wheaton | |
| Christopher Walken | Jacob Witting | |
| Lexi Randall | Anna Witting | |
| Christopher Bell | Caleb Witting | |
| Betty Laird | Mrs. Parkley | |
| Margaret Sophie Stein | Maggie Grant | |
| Jon DeVries | Matthew Grant | |
| James Rebhorn | William Wheaton | |
| Woody Watson | Jess Stearns | |
| Marc Penney | Ticket Agent | |
| Kara Beth Taylor | Rose | |
| Tresa Hughes | Matty Wheaton | |
| Lee Richardson | Chub Horatio | |
| Malgorzata Zajaczkowska | Maggie Grant |
| Director |
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| Producer | Glenn Jordan
Glenn Close |
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| Writer | Carol Sobieski
Patricia MacLachlan |
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| Cinematography | Ralf D. Bode
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| Musician | David Shire
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In the early years of the 1900s, a young widower named Jacob Witting (Christopher Walken) tries to raise his two young children in rural Kansas. This daunting task is exacerbated by the children who need a mother. Anna Witting (Lexi Randall) and her brother Caleb Witting (Christopher Bell) force Jacob to consider finding a wife any way he can. A tough but kind Maine woman named Sarah Wheaton (Glenn Close) offers to step into the breach, but only if she can affect their lives in a positive way. She wants a thirty-day test period before she decides whether to stay. Jacob realizes this is certainly not the same woman as his demure late wife, but agrees. |
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