‘One Tree Hill’ star Sophia Bush is engaged to entrepreneur Grant Hughes

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Sophia Bush is planning to get married again.

The “One Tree Hill” star announced she is engaged to her boyfriend Grant Hughes on Tuesday, sharing a photo of the couple on a boat in Lake Como, Italy.

In true fairytale fashion, the healthcare industry entrepreneur was snapped as he knelt down on one knee to propose.

“So it turns out that being your favorite person’s favorite person is the actual best feeling on planet Earth,” Bush, 39, captioned the Instagram post, adding the hashtag #YES.

The Pasadena-born actress followed up with two more Instagram posts, one of the pair cuddled up on the vessel, with the caption “Forever Favorite,” and another of them driving the boat.

Hughes also shared in the excitement, posting to Instagram a snapshot of the newly betrothed couple smooching.

“She is my forever Favorite. This is my favorite,” he wrote. “And our life is that we’re building because she said ‘Yes’ is already my favorite. I am SO EXCITED to do life with you, my love.”

Bush and Grant first sparked romance rumors when they were spotted holding hands in Malibu in May 2020. The couple reportedly were friends for eight years before they pursued a romantic relationship with each other amid the pandemic.

“[Sophia] was in my life as a friend for 8 years and the pandemic forced us to slow down and stay in one place long enough to realize what I’d been looking for all along was closer than I could have known,” Grant wrote on Instagram in January.

Prior to Hughes, Bush was married to her “One Tree Hill” co-star Chad Michael Murray for five months in 2005.

During a recent appearance on Michael Rosenbaum’s “Inside of You” podcast, Bush declined to talk about her brief marriage to Murray, saying, “It’s not worth my time.”

“Oh, I’m not going to talk about him,” she said at the time. “I’m not allowed to because I’ve tried to poke fun at being a dumb kid and whenever I’ve done that, it gets twisted into I’m talking s—t about somebody who I don’t even know anymore, who’s clearly a grown-up. I think you have to, like, laugh at who you used to be, but when people ask me about history that involves someone else … it’s not worth my time. It’s not a place where I harbor ill will or anything.”