The creator of an intentionally cheesy 1995 Pizza Hut ad starring Donald and Ivana Trump — which featured the exes poking fun at their divorce, and became known by ad execs behind the scenes as the “Pizza Slut” campaign — is selling off memorabilia from the shoot.

The 20-plus-year-old spot starring Trump was for Pizza Hut’s then-new “stuffed crust pizza,” and was shot on a Queens set designed to look like a Trump Tower suite during a romantic rendezvous.

Trump and Ivana — who had divorced in 1990 — exchange what sound like racy come-ons until it’s revealed they are talking about the pie.

Moments in Time

The ad’s creative director unearthed storyboards for the shoot signed by both Trump and Ivana, and is putting them up for sale for $15,000.

“He was pleasant to work with, but you can see that he has to be the one in control,” the anonymous ad man told Moments in Time dealer Gary Zimet of the shoot. “When Trump agreed to do the commercial, he had one stipulation — to arrive at 8 a.m. and leave at 2 p.m. on the dot. His hard-stop rule was non-negotiable.”

In the storyboards for sale, Trump asks, “Ivana, do you really think this is the right thing for us to be doing?” “What will people think?” she wonders. “Since when do I care what people think?” The Donald shoots back, adding, “It’s wrong . . . isn’t it?” “But it feels so right . . . Let’s just do it,” Ivana urges. Trump asks if they have a “deal”; “OK, crust first,” he says as they dig in by eating the stuffed slices backwards. The ad ends with Ivana trying to take the last slice and Trump warning her, “You are only entitled to half.” (In the divorce, Ivana reportedly got $14 million, plus property in Manhattan, Connecticut and Florida.)

Back then, the stuffed-crust large pizza went for $9.99. Trump autographed the storyboards with “Great Job!”

Says the seller: “I have to say that at the time he was a very likable person to work with. In 1995, there was nothing political about him or his brand.” The ads by BBDO were part of a $45 million campaign that helped Pizza Hut’s sales improve by $300 million that year, according to Adweek.