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Yvonne Orji’s dance card is totally full.

The 34-year-old actress who stars on HBO’s “Insecure” is writing a book, developing a TV show produced by Harpo Studios, maintaining a regular podcast and appearing in her first film, “Night School,” out Friday. All that, and she still pursues a stand-up comedy career.

“Chris Rock gave me some really good advice,” Orji tells The Post. “Stand-up is what sets you apart. You can’t get rid of it.”

Orji hasn’t. She’ll be performing at Carolines Comedy Club as part of the New York Comedy Festival on Nov. 8. In the meantime, audiences can enjoy her comic chops in “Night School,” which stars Kevin Hart and Tiffany Haddish. Hart plays a high school dropout who takes a class to earn his GED diploma 17 years later. Haddish is his teacher.

“Sharing a hair and makeup trailer with her is an adventure,” Orji says of the energetic “Girls Trip” actress. “If you have those early morning calls, just be prepared for Haddishisms.”

Issa Rae and Orji in a scene from “Insecure.”Merie W. Wallace/HBOIssa Rae and Orji in a scene from “Insecure.”Merie W. Wallace/HBO

Orji also got to work with Hart, playing his salesman character’s girlfriend’s best pal. Being on set with Hart — “one of my comedy idols” — was almost like being at a show.

“Kevin’s always on,” she says. “And for me, as a comic, you’re so used to performing that you want downtime, or you don’t want to be the one to make people laugh all the time. You want to maybe, like, sleep or go into a cocoon. Not with Kevin.”

Mainstream success only came recently for Orji, who was born in Nigeria and moved to the United States at age 6. She nabbed the role of Molly, a relationship-challenged corporate lawyer, on “Insecure” when she was 32. Now she’s recognized on the streets of Los Angeles, where she lives.

“I get stopped and people are, like, ‘I’m Molly!,’” she says. “And I’m like, ‘Do you have a therapist? Get help!’”

All jokes aside, connecting with people is very important to Orji, especially when it comes to her Nigerian background. The TV show she currently has in development, “First Gen,” is about a Nigerian family that comes to America, modeled after her own. With the personal project, she wants to give stateside audiences an image of Africans they usually don’t get.

“I think we’re really ready to see an African family as I would desire to portray them,” Orji says. “Because a lot of times when you see Africans on television, you get caricatures a la ‘Coming to America’ … or you see them in a despondent position a la ‘Hotel Rwanda.’

“You know, we don’t operate in those extremes every single day!”

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