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'Girls' Star Zosia Mamet Marries Evan Jonigkeit Shortly After Series Wraps -- See the Cute Pic!

Zosia Mamet is married!

The Girls star tied the knot with longtime boyfriend Evan Jonigkeit over the weekend, sharing a sweet message for her newlywed husband on Instagram on Sunday.

"@evanj550 my best friend, my soulmate, my HUSBAND, I love you. Here's to forever and a day," the 28-year-old actress wrote alongside a sweet photo of bride-and-groom rubber duckies.

Zosia Mamet is married!

The Girls star tied the knot with longtime boyfriend Evan Jonigkeit over the weekend, sharing a sweet message for her newlywed husband on Instagram on Sunday.

"@evanj550 my best friend, my soulmate, my HUSBAND, I love you. Here's to forever and a day," the 28-year-old actress wrote alongside a sweet photo of bride-and-groom rubber duckies.

EXCLUSIVE: The Cast of 'Girls' Looks Ahead to Final Season and a Long Goodbye

@evanj550 my best friend, my soulmate, my HUSBAND, I love you. Here's to forever and a day

A photo posted by @zosiamamet on

Jonigkeit, who has appeared in such films as X-Men: Days of Future Past and Whisky Tango Foxtrot, shared the same photo, with the caption, "Last night I married my best friend. @zosiamamet."

The wedding bells came after an emotional week for the Girls cast, who recently finished filming their sixth and final season of the HBO show.

MORE: Lena Dunham Mourns End of 'Girls' With Sweet Instagram Tribute and '45 Minutes of Sobbing'

"To say I don't enjoy goodbyes is an understatement," show star and creator Lena Dunham shared in an emotional Instagram post. "I know I'm not alone in the Girls family when I say this is the end of the largest and most potent chapter of my life so far."

Girls Goodbye (1 of 3) It���s 2 am on Friday morning and we just finished shooting Girls. Forever. No insert shots of cell phones or exteriors to grab. We���re not missing a quick shot of Shosh marching down a Soho street. We���re finished. We did it all. Jenni called that final cut, I dropped my costume on our van floors (sorry Kristen, sorry I never hang my damned costume) and we got into our vans to head home for the last time. To say I don't enjoy goodbyes is an understatement. But, as a wise woman once told me, "relish it. We so rarely get to choose our goodbyes." She's right. And we got to choose this one. But that doesn't mean it's easy-- I know I'm not alone in the Girls family when I say this is the end of the largest and most potent chapter of my life so far. Before Girls I had zero identity, zero self-love and an urgent sense of untapped creative desire that kept me up and sweating at night in other people's beds, wondering why vague sexual affirmation wasn���t enough to make me feel human. I had hardly an inkling of the responsibility we take on when we tell stories, or of the power words can have, but what I had- as an obsessed fan of shows from Girlfriends to Felicity to Ally McBeal- was the audacity to think that people might want to see women like my friends and me (broken, imperfect, angry) on television. When we shot our pilot six years ago, I never dreamed that I could be so fulfilled by the process of art-making, of collaboration, of honest expression. And so through this show I developed an identity, gained a new kind of family and began my life in earnest. It's an embarrassment of riches. There are too many essential personnel to name here, and the messages I have for them are far too intimate for this modern venue, but I trust I've made it clear who you are and what you mean to me. If I haven't, please feel free to demand explanations.

A photo posted by Lena Dunham (@lenadunham) on

Well, we are wishing Mamet well as she moves from that time in her life to the next. Congrats to the happy couple!

EXCLUSIVE: Lena Dunham and Andrew Rannells Revisit Their College Youth in 'Girls' Deleted Scene

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