Blake Lively submitted an amended version of her complaint filing against her “It Ends With Us” co-star Justin Baldoni, alleging that he made other women feel “uncomfortable” on set.
The “Gossip Girl” alum, 37, updated her initial lawsuit, which was filed on Dec. 31, in New York Federal Court late on Tuesday, court documents obtained by The Post show.
The new 163-page filing, “provides significant additional evidence and corroboration of her original claims,” according to Lively’s lawyers Esra Hudson and Mike Gottlieb.
Hudson and Gottlieb added that this version “includes previously undisclosed communications” involving the “Age of Adaline” actress, Sony, Wayfarer Studios and “numerous other witnesses.”
Lively’s legal team added that there is also a “new claim of defamation” included in the amended document, which is “based on the repeated false statements the defendants have made about Ms. Lively since she filed her original complaint, and adds Jed Wallace and his company as defendants,” they alleged.
Wallace, for his part, is individually suing the “A Simple Favor” actress and denies any involvement in an alleged smear campaign.
Hudson and Gottlieb allege that Baldoni’s “false narrative crumbles under the indisputable truth” that Lively “was not alone in complaining about Mr. Baldoni and raised her concerns contemporaneously as they arose in 2023, not in connection with some imagined power play for control of the film in 2024.”
However, they did not mention any names.
The amended filing also “details the corroboration that backs up Blake’s original sexual harassment and retaliation concerns,” Lively’s legal team alleges, and proves how “other women confided in Blake about their discomfort and fear of coming forward and their concern about the current public vitriol.”
The Post has reached out to reps for Baldoni and Lively for comment.
The duo’s legal war kickstarted in December after Lively detailed allegations of sexual harassment, retaliation, intentional affliction of emotional distress, negligence, and more against Baldoni and film producer Jamey Heath in a complaint first filed with the California Civil Rights Department and later in federal court.
Baldoni, in his own lawsuit filed in January, insisted that Lively “falsely” had accused him in an attempt to repair her reputation amid the fallout around the movie’s press tour after the actress took control of the film.
The actor’s legal team claimed that Lively had no evidence of a deliberate smear campaign and instead worked to repair her reputation by accusing the actor and others of sexual harassment.
Both sides have denied the allegations against them and have shown no interest in settling the lawsuit.
Earlier this month, Lively and Reynolds’ legal team subpoenaed phone records of Baldoni and others involved in the courtroom showdown over the alleged plot to ruin the actress’s reputation.
Baldoni’s lawyer, Bryan Freedman, slammed the move as a “fishing expedition.”
He also hit out at Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively for their appearance at the “Saturday Night Live” 50th anniversary special.