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He won’t be “Over the Rainbow” about this!

A Judy Garland super fan traveled from California to New York just to buy a burial spot next to the screen legend — only to have his dreams dashed when her remains were shipped back to Hollywood.

The unidentified diehard purchased the space adjacent to Garland in the Ferncliff Mausoleum in Hartsdale — a piece of real estate that sells for up to $15,500 at the cemetery.

“It’s funny because there’s a man who specifically flew in from California because he is a big fan of hers,” a cemetery manager told The Post.

“He purchased a plot near her so when he dies he could be next to her. I don’t know what he is going to do now.”

The “Wizard of Oz” star had been interred in crypt No. 31 in Unit 9 since 1969, when she died of a barbiturate overdose.

But her remains were exhumed Thursday and sent to Los Angeles at the behest of her daughter Liza Minnelli.

Garland was moved to the West Coast because Ferncliff didn’t have enough room for the rest of her family — including children Liza, 70; Lorna Luft, 64; and Joey Luft, 61 — to be buried alongside her, People reported.

The actress will be re-interred at the star-studded Hollywood Forever Cemetery, where celebrities such as punk rockers Johnny and Dee Dee Ramone, filmmaker Cecil B. DeMille and The Beatles’ George Harrison are spending eternity.

“At this time, it’s a private family matter,” a Hollywood Forever spokeswoman said, declining to provide details on where exactly Garland’s new resting place would be.

Garland was in good company at Ferncliff — where Oscar-winning actress Joan Crawford, author James Baldwin and civil-rights activist Malcolm X are also interred.

The manager said it wasn’t clear whether Garland’s empty tomb would be filled.

“We haven’t decided what to do yet but we think because she’s been here so long, we will just leave it here and memorialize her,” the manager said.

On Friday, after news that the “Over the Rainbow” singer’s remains had been moved out of New York, fans left fresh flowers, photos and cards at her gravesite.

One of the actress’ “biggest fans,” Bobby Garmic, penned an adoring note.

“After all these years you are still the top,” he wrote. “One of my favorite things of my life was seeing you in person at the Palace Theater with Joe and Lorna in 1967.”

Ferncliff officials declined to comment.

Garland, a two-time Academy Award nominee whose 1961 Carnegie Hall concert ranks among the venue’s greatest performances, was found dead in her London home at age 47.