The woman ​who got 108 catcalls in a viral hidden camera ​video of her walk​ing​ around New York City ​over the course of 10 hours ​is suing the ​man who made her famous.

Struggling actress Shoshana Roberts ​filed suit against producer Robert Bliss and the nonprofit anti-harassment group Hollaback!​ — plus YouTube, Google and TGI Friday’s,​ which parodied the video in an ad​ ​​– for more than $500,000, according to the new Manhattan filing.

The lawsuit says the defendants in the case used Roberts’ “creative content, performance, image likeness​”​ for purposes of advertising or trade without her written consent.

The three-page document is vague on why Roberts feels she’s been wrong​ed​. It cites fraud, unjust enrichment, and violation of publicity and privacy rights.

Roberts referred questions to her lawyer, who replied by email that he had just boarded a flight and was unavailable to comment.

The lawyer refused to tell TMZ in an interview whether his client was paid when she responded to a casting call for the spot.

Last October,​ the 25-year-old Long Island City resident told The Washington Post that she “was putting myself forward as a face for this cause because it’s something I really believe in.”

But in May, Roberts told The Village Voice, “It’s frustrating when the nonprofit gets donations, and the director gets ad revenue, and I get people wanting to slit my throat.” She said she was paid $200 to participate in the campaign created by Bliss, who specializes in viral videos, in conjunction with Hollback! as part of its efforts to bring attention to street harassment. She landed interviews with major news outlets across the globe, but she also attracted nasty threats from internet trolls.

Roberts still prominently displays a link to the video, boasting about its “40+ million views” on her professional website with the social media hashtags #catcallgirl and #clawsareout.

Both the video producer, Bliss, and head of Hollaback, Emily May, declined to comment.