A Netflix producer who claims Harvey Weinstein raped her several times sent the disgraced producer hundreds of affectionate emails, it's been revealed.

Alexandra Canosa, who worked as a producer at the Weinstein Company for 10 years, is suing the mogul for sexually attacking her repeatedly from 2010 to 2017.

However, emails obtained by The New York Post show that less than two weeks after she says Weinstein forced her to perform oral sex on him in 2011, she sent an email to him writing: 'Miss you too. Love to you and the girls'.

And in another 2010 email she writes: 'I'm thinking about you'. This email was sent just one day after she claims he raped her.

Alexandra Canosa worked as a producer at the Weinstein Company for 10 years and for the Netflix show Marco Polo and claims she was raped at least nine times by Weinstein between 2010 and 2017 and also accuses him of sexual assault (pictured together in 2012)

Canosa is one of scores of women who have come forward accusing Weinstein of sexual assault.

But emails show that less than two weeks after she says Weinstein forced her to perform oral sex on him in 2011 she sent him an email saying she loved him

She suing Weinstein, 67, for unspecified damages.

Canosa, who produced the Netflix series Marco Polo, addresses Weinstein as 'love' and signs off with 'love, Ally' in several messages.

The emails go as far as 2017, when Canosa sent Weinstein a condolence message after his mother died.

'I know how much she meant to you and how deeply loved and respected she was and I can only imagine how proud she must have been of all you have created and contributed to, throughout your life,' she wrote.

A 2013 email shows Canosa wrote: 'You have been my mentor and friend for many years now and have never failed to give me the right advice. I am trying to figure out what my next step should be for my career as a whole and I trust your guidance completely.'

The Post reports that Canosa tried to keep the messages out of the courtroom and then blasted Weinstein for refusing to agree to her request.

'Weinstein and his counsel are trying to manipulate and misuse these emails out of context to taint the Jury pool by creating a false impression that there was a consensual sexual relationship when there was only a consensual business relationship,' Canosa's lawyer Jeremy Hellman wrote in a letter to the judge last month.

Last week, the judge denied the motion, citing that that the emails 'are not properly designated as confidential'.

Thomas Giuffra, another one of Canosa's lawyers, said Sunday: 'The defense has thousands of emails between Miss Canosa and Harvey Weinstein. They're choosing to cherry-pick five or six of those emails to attempt to show some kind of consensual relationship between the two.'

Weinstein has denied all accusations of nonconsensual sex and is due to stand trial in January next year. He faces life in prison for two counts of predatory sexual assault

Weinstein's lawyer Elior Shiloh said: 'The truth was finally coming out' after Canosa 'desperately tried to hide her own emails from the public as they completely undermine her claims.'

Shiloh added: 'The lawsuit is a slap in the face to actual victims of sexual violence'.

Canosa claims Weinstein sexually assaulted her for the first time in 2010 at the Tribeca Grand Hotel.

The alleged abuse continued until September 2017 and took place in New York, Los Angeles and overseas in Malaysia and Budapest.

She says he threatened that she would lose her job and he'd blackball her if she denied his advances.

'On many occasions, Harvey Weinstein insisted on meeting with plaintiff in isolated environments for business purposes, made sure that no other persons or bystanders were around when having business meetings with plaintiff, demanded sexual contact, and threatened plaintiff if she would not give him what he wanted, and forcing himself on plaintiff despite repeated requests to stop,' Canosa's initial complaint said.

Weinstein has denied all accusations of nonconsensual sex and is due to stand trial in January next year. He faces life in prison for two counts of predatory sexual assault.