A young stage actress suffered her “worst nightmare” when she was groped and shoved to the tracks at a Greenwich Village subway station early Friday morning, her roommate told The Post.

Bonnie Currie, 22, was on the northbound F/M platform at 14th Street and Sixth Avenue at 4:20 a.m. when the man in his 20s walked up to her and grabbed her crotch, cops said.

She shoved his hand away, and he pushed her onto the tracks. There was no train approaching, but she broke her wrist in the fall.

Currie was recovering in her hospital bed on Friday and told WCBS-TV about the frightening experience.

“Seconds after I had gotten, walked down and gotten off to the F subway platform – and I like hadn’t even stopped moving; I was still walking with forward motion because I was going to the underpass – a dude came up from behind me,” Currie told the network.

“He pushed me as hard as he could push me onto the subway tracks.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/v9EqobAiAN/?taken-by=bonnie.j.currie

A trio of good Samaritans helped Currie; one woman called 911 and two men lifted her off the tracks to safety. She was taken to Lenox Health Greenwich Village and was moved to another hospital for surgery later on Friday.

“Luckily, there were two people that were there in that hour – in that early hour – which was so lucky, and they pulled me off of the tracks,” Currie told CBS.

But the spill could spell trouble for the victim’s career, according to her mom Bess Brackett, who is a surgeon.

“I deal with this all the time, and you don’t have a crystal ball, but any time you have to have surgery it’s always a challenge,” Brackett told The Post.

Currie is a budding actress who pays the bills waiting tables in Manhattan, according to a friend and co-worker.

“She is super outgoing, very loving,” said Matthew Dirschel. “We bonded because we’re both big musical theater fans and actors.”

Recent Instagram posts show Currie soaking in the sights on rooftop bars and smiling with fellow waiters.

A photo she posted during January’s Women’s March includes the hashtag #pu–ygrabsback — a phrase adopted by people opposing sexual assault.

The incident is the latest in a trend of escalating violence in the subway system, cop stats show.

Through April 9, there were 95 felony assaults reported in the subway system this year, compared to 85 over the same period last year — a nearly 12 percent jump, according to NYPD data.

This year’s figure represents a 63.8 percent rise over 2015 and an 82.7 percent spike compared to 2014, data shows.

“Random acts unprovoked of violence — they happen, but you never expect them to happen to you or your loved ones,” Brackett said.