Cue up Cole Porter!

The iconic Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, once home to the great Broadway composer but closed for eight years, will finally reopen to guests in September — months later than Hilton promised it would, and after four previous delays since the hotel closed in 2017.

A Hilton Instagram post says,  “The iconic hotel is set to welcome guests once again this coming September.”

A Waldorf-Astoria New York spokesperson told The Post, “We expect to open our doors sooner. Our exact opening date is still being determined.”

An industry source said, “No wonder they’re being cautious. Every time they touted a reopening, it didn’t happen.”

A reopening will be a relief to Hilton, which has 90 years left on  a 100-year management contract. The Waldorf was first touted to reopen in  2021, 2023, 2024 and, most recently, this spring.

The Waldorf-Astoria is beloved by New Yorkers and visitors for its Art Deco architecture and interior treasures such as Peacock Alley with Cole Porter’s piano, which will again be on display.

Multiple media outlets have  touted hotel  managing director Luigi Romaniello,  its decorators,  a restaurant called Lex Yard run by Gramercy Tavern chef Michael Anthony — and also the inaccurate opening schedules.

A Hilton web site posting for staff uniforms “designed by NO  Uniform, the specialist design studio led by acclaimed British couture designer Nicholas Oakwell,” also included the September reopening date.

Construction sources told The Post in February that the Waldorf’s spring  target  couldn’t be met and the hotel wouldn’t be ready to receive guests until  as late as October.

Hilton operates several dozen hotels and resorts around the world branded as the “Waldorf Astoria Collection.” But sources said Hilton suits were “privately fuming” over repeated delays to  bringing back the original Waldorf on Park Avenue.

Hilton sold the landmarked property to China’s Anbang Insurance Group for $1.95 billion in 2015. Anbang was to convert more than half of the landmark to luxury condos while reducing 1,400 guest rooms and suites to  375, although the new ones would be larger than the originals.

But as the $2 billion-plus construction project inched along,  Anbang’s chief executive was imprisoned by the Chinese government in 2018. A new company,  Daija Insurance Group, took over the Waldorf job  — but  proved little more swift than its predecessor.

The new Waldorf boasts 375 luxury condo units, a few of which have begun receiving residents.

Sources said Daija’s frenzy to complete the condos — from studios priced just below $2 million to lavish four-bedroom units up to $15 million — got the most attention. “The hotel part wasn’t on the fast track,” one source said.

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