US News

Angelina Jolie wants Anna Chapman at Moscow premiere of spy film ‘Salt’

Angelina Jolie wants to get up close and personal with redheaded Russian spy Anna Chapman.

Jolie — who plays a suspected Russian agent in her new flick “Salt” — has asked local promoters to invite Chapman, the real-life femme fatale, to the Moscow premiere of her movie, for which the Oscar-winning actress is expected to arrive next week, the promoters said.

There’s only one problem — finding Chapman to invite her, they said.

“How are we going to look for Chapman? We have no idea,” one “Salt” promoter, Igor Dubinin, told the Russian news Web site Lifenews.ru.

“But since it’s a personal request . . . we’ll do everything possible.”

PHOTOS: ANGELINA JOLIE

PHOTOS: ANNA CHAPMAN

Chapman — dubbed “Agent 90-60-90” by Russian media because of her ample measurements in centimeters — is reportedly being interrogated by her superiors along with nine fellow deported agents at an undisclosed government compound in Moscow.

The spies, swapped for four Western moles last week, are being debriefed and given lie-detector tests and don’t have the use of their cellphones, sources have said.

The movie’s local promoters said they have sent a personal premiere invitation to Chapman’s last home address in Russia — and are crossing their fingers.

Jolie’s film, in which she plays a CIA agent suspected of being a Russian sleeper agent, has parallels to the real-life drama of Chapman, who posed for years as an American while serving Moscow.

“This is a unique convergence of a script and the fate of this woman,” another “Salt” promoter said.

When a spokesman for Sony Pictures was asked whether Chapman had been invited to the premiere, he replied, “We are not aware of anything like this.”

Chapman is already a star in her hometown of Volgograd, formerly known as Stalingrad, where fans asked Mayor Roman Grebennikov to bestow the title of “Honorary Citizen” on her.

“We think that in her activity in the US, she brought huge benefit to our country and glorified Volgograd to the whole world,” members of the group, called Volgograd Breakthrough, wrote to Grebennikov.

Meanwhile, new details emerged about the most recent, US-deported alleged Russian agent, Alexey Karetnikov.

Karetnikov — described by co-workers as a “likable” but lonely entry-level software tester at Microsoft for the past nine months — was arrested on immigration violations on June 28, one day after the spy scandal involving Chapman and the others broke.

He was quietly held by federal authorities until he was deported and flown home Tuesday from Kennedy Airport, authorities said.

A friend and classmate told The Post, “He was quite lonely in [the] US and wanted to bring his wife there as soon as possible to be together.”

She was supposed to come to the United States to join him this month, but he was busted.

andy.soltis@nypost.com