Blake Lively‘s legal battle with her It Ends With Us director and co-star took a new turn late Tuesday night when she filed an amended complaint alleging that two other actresses on the set of the film are prepared to testify as to their own uncomfortable experiences with Baldoni or with his Wayfarer Studios partner Jamey Heath.
The suit does not name the actresses out of concern that they may be exposed to the same sort of cyberbullying and threats Lively and her husband, Ryan Reynolds, claim they have endured, along with others associated with the film, which was produced by Wayfarer and co-financed by Sony Pictures, which marketed and distributed the sleeper hit. The movie, adapted from Colleen Hoover’s bestselling novel about a couple in love caught up in a growing cycle of domestic abuse, grossed north of $351 million globally against a modest budget of $25 million.
“Ms. Lively has filed an amended complaint today that provides significant additional evidence and corroboration of her original claims. That evidence includes previously undisclosed communications involving Ms. Lively, representatives of Sony and Wayfarer, and numerous other witnesses,” her lawyers Esra Hudson and Mike Gottlieb said in a statement. “The complaint includes significant contemporaneous evidence that Ms. Lively was not alone in raising allegations of on-set misconduct more than a year before the film was edited; as well as evidence detailing the threats, harassment, and intimidation of not just Ms. Lively, but numerous innocent bystanders that have followed defendants’ retaliatory campaign.”
The filing could represent another shakeup in the It Ends with Us legal and PR battle, which until now has largely been seen as a fight between Lively and Baldoni. Having two more women from the production allegedly claim they were likewise mistreated by the director could push the saga from being perceived as a bitter feud into literal #MeToo territory.
Sources indicate the two women are actresses Jenny Slate and Isabela Ferrer, who could not immediately be reached for comment. Slate is an acclaimed comic and actress known for roles in Parks and Recreation and Everything Everywhere All at Once. While Ferrer is a newcomer to the industry and was only around 23 at the time of filming, when she played the younger version of Lively’s character.
According to the amended suit, experiences of Lively and others were documented at the time they occurred, beginning in May of 2023. On May 24, 2023, Lively confided in a text to a woman who was a mutual friend of Mr. Baldoni and Mr. Heath: “I was gonna invite you to set tomorrow. These people. Whoa . . . It’s like HR nuts today. The both of them. I wasn’t expecting that turn. I mean it’s been present but today I came home and cried.” Further in the exchange, Lively describes Mr. Baldoni and Mr. Heath as “creeps . . . . Like keep your hormones to yourselves. This is not mine. I don’t want it. I don’t want you [sic] gaze or words or tongue or videos of your naked wife. Yeah. It’s shocking. Clowns,” states the amended lawsuit.
A few days later, on May 26, 2023, Lively reported her concerns regarding unwelcome and inappropriate behavior by Baldoni and Heath to Sony employee Ange Gianetti. The suit says Baldoni acknowledged the complaints in writing at the time when reaching out to one of the women.
Over the following three days, another female cast member reported her own concerns regarding Baldoni’s unwelcome behavior to both Gianetti and one of the film’s producers.
The amended complaint has also added a new claim for defamation 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, according to a spokesperson by Lively. Wallace, a crisis PR manager and Internet savant, was brought on by Wayfarer and has worked closely with Baldoni’s lawyer Bryan Freedman and crisis PR manager Melissa Nathan.
The amended complaint further alleges that Wayfarer co-founder and billionaire Steve Sarowtiz told a witness that he “will protect the studio like Israel protected itself from Hamas. There were 39,000 dead bodies.” Continuing he told the witness, there will be two dead bodies when I’m done. Minimum. Not dead, but you’re dead to me. So that kind of dead. But dead to a lot of people.” (Lively alleged in her original complaint that he was has not denied telling another third party he was prepared to spend $100 million to ruin the lives of Ms. Lively and her family.”
Wayfarer reps did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Since publicizing misconduct allegations over the filming of It Ends With Us in December, Lively has been trading legal blows with Baldoni in dueling lawsuits in federal court in New York as each side looks to curry public favor in the highly publicized dispute. Thus far, they’ve refused to engage in settlement discussions, according to court documents.
The new allegations from Lively filed on Tuesday expand on the narrative she detailed in her initial lawsuit accusing Baldoni and his public relations team of undermining her reputation in retaliation for speaking up about sexual misconduct on the set of the film. It’s her first chance at responding in court about Baldoni’s lawsuit against her and her husband or defamation and extortion. In that complaint, Baldoni has argued that Lively raised objections about his behavior, which included entering her trailer uninvited while she was breastfeeding and improvising an unwanted kissing scene during filming, to wrest creative control of the movie.
Lively’s amended suit tries to paint a different picture, citing correspondence from Sony execs supporting her cut of the film.
Among the many reasons the legal drama has fascinated Hollywood is the tangling web of relationships between the major players in the litigation. Shortly after cutting ties with Baldoni, WME — which also represents Lively and her megastar husband, Reynolds — released a statement insisting that the married stars didn’t pressure the agency to do drop him.
The litigation has ensnared Baldoni’s film studio, Wayfarer, and their public relations representatives, Nathan and Jennifer Abel.
Also named Baldoni’s lawsuit against Lively is Reynolds and Leslie Sloane, the actress’ public relations representative of Vision PR.