André Morell as Englishman in train compartment (uncredited).McIlhenny (Rose was the only cast member of the Broadway production to appear in the movie) He stops, opens the box and holds up his gift: another gardenia. He tries to hand her a package through the window but the train is moving too quickly. As the train begins to leave the station, Jane is thrilled to see Renato running down the platform. Later, on the station platform, Mauro runs up to say goodbye and offers Jane a free trinket as a gift. Although Jane asks Renato not to come to the train station, she hopes he will ignore her request. Renato begs her to stay, but Jane insists on leaving, arguing that it is better to leave a party before it ends. Jane, unwilling to remain in a relationship she knows is destined to end unhappily, decides to return home early. The couple spend several idyllic days on Burano. Afterwards, with fireworks in the distance, Jane and Renato go to Renato's home where their affair is consummated. Their date continues at an open-air courtyard night club, where they dance the night away. He accuses her of being immature and unwilling to accept what she can have rather than longing for the unattainable. He admits that he is married, but claims that he and his wife are separated, which he had concealed because he did not want to scare her away. She is appalled, saying "Something happens to this city at night." Renato arrives and tells her that in Italy things are different, and the relationship between the Signora and Eddie is none of her business. Upon returning to the pensione, Jane discovers that Eddie is having an affair with Signora Fiorini, with Mauro acting as go-between. Stunned to discover Renato is married and has several children, Jane takes refuge in a bar where she encounters Phyl, who confides that her marriage to Eddie is in trouble. While she waits for him at the piazza, Renato's "nephew" Vito arrives and inadvertently reveals that he is actually Renato's son. The next day, Jane treats herself to salon treatments and new clothes in anticipation of their date that evening. As they return to the pensione, Renato kisses Jane, and she responds passionately and murmurs, "I love you", before rushing off to her room. Later, as the couple wander through Venice, Jane drops her gardenia into a canal despite much effort, Renato is unable to retrieve it for her. When a flower seller approaches them, Renato is surprised when Jane chooses a simple gardenia instead of an orchid. The couple attend the moonlit concert in the piazza, where an orchestra plays the overture to La gazza ladra. Jane's anger subsides, and the promise of Rossini in the Piazza San Marco convinces her to accept his invitation. Renato realizes that Jane now thinks he has swindled her, but he assures her that the same designs have been used for centuries in Venice and he insists that her goblet is a genuine antique. She seems on the verge of agreeing to have dinner with him when the McIlhennys return from a shopping trip to Murano where they purchased a set of new red goblets similar to the one Jane bought. When Jane resists his advances, he warns her not to waste an opportunity for happiness. That evening, de Rossi comes to her pensione and confesses his attraction for her. She begs Mauro to take her home to the Pensione Fiorini. Jane is humiliated when she accidentally steps backward into a canal while filming de Rossi's shop. The next morning, Jane returns to the shop with Mauro, and is disappointed to discover that Renato is not there. Hoping to see her again, Renato offers to search for a matching goblet. He assures her that the goblet is an authentic 18th-century artifact, and she purchases it after he teaches her the art of bargaining. Upon entering the shop, she discovers that the owner, Renato de Rossi, is the man from whom she had fled the night before. The following day, Jane goes shopping and sees a red glass goblet in the window of an antiques store. While seated at an outdoor caffè, she becomes aware of a lone Italian man watching her panicking, she quickly leaves. On her first evening in Venice, Jane walks to the Piazza San Marco, where the sight of so many romantic couples intensifies her loneliness. Jane is pestered off and on during her stay by Mauro, a friendly Italian street urchin. Also staying at the property are Eddie Yaeger, a young American painter, and his wife Phyl. At the hotel, they are greeted by Signora Fiorini, a widow who has converted her home into a pensione. On the vaporetto to her hotel, she meets two fellow Americans, Lloyd and Edith McIlhenny. Jane Hudson is an unmarried, middle-aged, self-described "fancy secretary" from Akron, Ohio, on her summer vacation, enjoying her lifelong dream of a trip to Venice after having saved money for it over several years.
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