Put a ring on it already! Lena Dunham tells Jack Antonoff to finally propose after gay marriage is legalized in the US

She vowed to not get engaged to boyfriend Jack Antonoff until gay marriage was legal in the United States.

And now that the US Supreme Court ruled in favour of same-sex marriage, Lena Dunham is telling her rocker beau to put a ring on it.

The 29-year-old tweeted on Friday: '@jackantonoff Get on it, yo...'

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Love is free! Now that the US Supreme Court ruled in favour of same-sex marriage, Lena Dunham is telling her rocker beau Jack Antonoff to put a ring on it, pictured at the Emmy Awards last August

Love is free! Now that the US Supreme Court ruled in favour of same-sex marriage, Lena Dunham is telling her rocker beau Jack Antonoff to put a ring on it, pictured at the Emmy Awards last August

The Fun guitarist of course favourited the tweet, indicating that some good news is on the way for Lena.

The pair have been dating since 2012.

Lena also wrote that same morning: 'Woke up to learn that love is free! Thank you to all those who fought so hard to make this historic moment happen. 

Wedding bells: The Fun guitarist of course favourited the tweet, indicating that some good news is on the way for Lena

Wedding bells: The Fun guitarist of course favourited the tweet, indicating that some good news is on the way for Lena

'Weddings are about to get a lot less boring... Let's use this victory as a reminder to keep pushing for equality on every frontier. We have the power!'

The Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that the Constitution's guarantees of due process and equal protection under the law mean that states cannot ban same-sex marriages. 

With the landmark ruling, gay marriage becomes legal in all 50 states.

Fun romance: The pair have been dating since 2012, pictured in New York in January

Fun romance: The pair have been dating since 2012, pictured in New York in January

Immediately after the decision, same-sex couples in many of states where gay marriage had been banned headed to county clerks' offices for marriage licenses as state officials issued statements saying they would respect the ruling.

President Barack Obama, appearing in the White House Rose Garden, hailed the ruling as a milestone in American justice that arrived 'like a thunderbolt.'

'This ruling is a victory for America,' said Obama, the first sitting president to support gay marriage. 'This decision affirms what millions of Americans already believe in their hearts. When all Americans are treated as equal, we are all more free.'

 

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