Amy Ephron gives us a delightful tale of romance, set against the
backdrop of New York society during the uncertain days of World War I.
Rosemary Fell was born to privilege - her only real hardship having been
the loss of her mother some years earlier. She has friends and she has a
great deal of money, and now she is about to marry Phillip Alsop, who
owns a shipping concern and is of her social circle, though not of her
wealth. Finally, she will have everything she wants. It is then, in a
moment of beneficence, that she invites Eleanor Smith, a penniless young
woman she sees under a streetlamp in the rain, to come to her home for a
cup of tea and to warm herself by the fire. While there, Rosemary sees
Eleanor exchange an unmistakable look with Phillip, and suddenly
everything in Rosemary's carefully sculptured life changes. Rosemary
sends Eleanor on her way, but she cannot undo this chance encounter that
puts into play a tempestuous and all-consuming triangle. As the war
builds in Europe, Phillip is sent to fight abroad, throwing all of their
lives off balance.