KEY POINTS

  • Lena Dunham and Luis Felber secretly tied the knot over the weekend, according to a report
  • Felber seemingly dropped a hint by sharing "This Will Be Our Year" on his Instagram Story
  • Dunham was asked to comment on the report, but her reps did not immediately respond

Lena Dunham is officially married to Luis Felber, a report has revealed.

Dunham 35, and Felber, also 35, exchanged "I dos" over the weekend. An unnamed source confirmed their wedding to People.

Felber seemingly hinted at their special day Sunday morning. He posted the song "This Will Be Our Year" by The Zombies on his Instagram Story with heart and alien emojis.

The outlet reached out to Dunham for comment, but her reps did not immediately respond.

Dunham confirmed her relationship with the English-Peruvian musician known professionally as Attawalpa in an interview with The New York Times published in April.

"It's been a few months. I feel really lucky," she said and gushed over Felber calling him "the greatest person I've ever met."

In June, Dunham shared a series of photos they took with their pet to celebrate his birthday.

"Feliz Cumpleanos Luis (two hearts emoji) When I was 3 weeks old in downtown Manhattan, I had no idea a baby was being born in England (Winchester, no less!) who would rocket into my life — wearing a lime green polar fleece snood — and challenge so many of my beliefs about myself and the world with magical abandon," she wrote in the caption.

"Everyone who comes into contact with you- creatively, emotionally, accidentally- is lucky. But I am the luckiest, because that snood is now in our shared chest of drawers."

She continued, "The warmth of your love is like the warmth of the sun and this will be our year, took a long time to come. Happy Birthday, Lulu @attawalpa."

In another post that same month, Dunham shared a photo with her now-husband and their pet. In the caption, she described them as a "family." According to her, "the family we choose for ourselves is as might as the family genetics can build."

"Taking this Sunday to appreciate my family, as it is today, as I created it, as it created me," she added.

Dunham previously wrote an essay for Harper's Magazine's December 2020 issue. In her op-ed, she detailed her struggles to have a biological child following her total hysterectomy.

She admitted that there was a time when she was so obsessed to be a mom. She searched for sites offering adoption and the "erratic and needy" obsession also moved her to find a surrogate after learning that her ovary was still producing eggs. However, after multiple failed IVF cycles, she realized that her experience could be a lesson to others who are as desperate as her to have a child.

"The irony is that knowing I cannot have a child — my ability to accept that and move on — may be the only reason I deserve to be anyone’s parent at all. I think I finally have something to teach somebody," she concluded.

Lena Dunham
Lena Dunham attends the Friendly House 30th Annual Awards Luncheon on October 26, 2019 in Los Angeles. Vince Bucci/Getty Images for Friendly House