Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow (Italian: Ieri, oggi, domani) is a 1963 comedy anthology film directed by Vittorio De Sica.
After seven children in eight years, Carmine becomes too exhausted to perform sexually and Adelina nearly resorts to being impregnated by their mutual friend Pasquale, but decides against it.
On the drive, Anna allows Renzo to take the wheel of the Rolls-Royce, and while she seductively proposes that they run away together that night, he swerves to avoid a young boy selling flowers by the roadside and crashes the car into a tractor.
Infuriated by the damage to her Rolls-Royce, Anna hitches a ride home with a passing motorist, leaving Renzo by the side of the road.
Mara works as a prostitute from her rooftop apartment overlooking Piazza Navona, servicing a variety of regular high-end clients including Augusto, the wealthy, powerful and neurotic son of a Bologna industrialist.
One evening, Mara befriends Umberto, a handsome and callow young man studying for the priesthood but not yet ordained, who is visiting his grandparents in the adjacent apartment.
The "Adelina" segment is based on the true story of Concetta Muccardi, a Neapolitan street vendor of contraband cigarettes who had 19 pregnancies to avoid going to prison.