GREENBURGH, N.Y. – A school aide in Greenburgh lost her position at the high school and was forced to change her Facebook settings as a reprimand for appearing topless in the docudrama “Free The Nipple.”

Victoria Bolton was an aide at Woodlands High School when she accepted the role in film, but when school officials found out about her after-school activities last week they moved her to the district’s administration building, and issued her a “letter of counsel,” lohud.com reports.

“I caution you to either limit your acting roles to those that will not result in nudity that is openly accessible to students in our district or consider whether your district position is one you can maintain, given your acting career,” Mary O’Neill, assistant superintendent for business, wrote in the letter.

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“To the extent your future acting roles cause a disruption in the school, we will consider taking action that may result I your termination.”

The letter told Bolton to change her Facebook page to private, to keep students’ eyes diverted.

O’Neill issued the letter based on pictures of a topless Bolton from the December premiere of “Free The Nipple” at the International Film Center in Manhattan.

“They were trying to same me,” Bolton told lohud. “And what was going on with me was making the point of the movie.”

Bolton is one of about two dozen women featured in the film, which centers on the national movement to give women equal ability to shed their tops in public, which is a crime in most states, according to the news site.

It’s not a crime in New York, however.

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“I thought about it, and found out it was legal,” Bolton told lohud, noting that a 1992 court ruling in New York allows women to bare their breasts in public. “Besides, I support equal rights for women. I’m not ashamed of it.”

Bolton told the news site it was allegedly an anonymous letter from a staffer that landed her in the hot seat.

“The district has bigger issues than my boobs,” she said.

“This past week was a learning lesson,” Bolton told lohud. “I learned to stand my ground. I didn’t panic. I didn’t shed a tear. The film was made to start a conversation. We started one here.”

She also started on online, where some are poking fun at her school dilemma.

“My grandfather didn’t almost get wounded at Pearl Harbor for this lady not to be able to post topless pictures of herself on her Facebook page without altering the privacy settings without getting transferred to a different office,” Filmdrunk blogger Vince Mancini wrote. “I thought this was America.”

Others are highlighting the school district’s supposed double standard.

“Whether you agree with her actions or not, the fact of the matter is that women have the legal right in New York to be topless in public wherever men are allowed to be topless,” Lisa Aravs posted to Facebook.

“As an extension of that, if the school district would discipline her, they would have to have a policy that they would also discipline a man who would similarly appear topless in film,” she wrote. “When it can be shown that there is evidence that male teachers have appeared in Facebook pictures without their shirts on, she’s going to have a pretty compelling case.”