
Age: 40
male
Benjamin Aldridge (born November 12, 1985) is an English actor, born in Devon. After years with the National Youth Theatre, Ben graduated from the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art with a bursary from the Genesis Foundation for young actors. He left early to begin filming his television debut alongside Ray Winstone and Parminder Nagra in Compulsion. He is notable for his role as Harry Fanshawe, husband of the title character in the 2008'Channel 4's critically acclaimed Civil War epic The Devil's Whore. He was selected by Screen International's 2008 "Stars of Tomorrow". As well as roles in First Light, Lewis, Toast and Vera, Ben also appeared as Daniel Parish in the BBC's period drama Lark Rise to Candleford. In 2011 the American network The CW cast Ben as the lead in their Pilot "Heavenly". Later on he spent time in Belgrade shooting the partially improvised love story "In the night" for director Ivana Bobic and award winning cinematographer Rain Li, alongside supermodel Daniela Dimitrovska. In September 2014, he joined BBC Original British Drama Our Girl as Captain Charles James. Ben is a co-founder of "In the Corner Productions".

In 1941, Steve Rogers gets experimented on with the Super-Soldier Serum giving him superhuman strength making him the first ever Super-Soldier to fight the Nazi’s. During World War II, Captain America served as both a symbol of freedom and America's most effective special operative. When Bucky happens to enter Roger’s tent as he was changing into his masked identity, he joins Cap as his sidekick on his missions. Meanwhile, Heinrich Zemo creates a large scale death ray cannon to destroy a German town. So Cap and Bucky alongside new allies Namor the Submarine, the Human Torch and Sgt. Jack Fury & the Howling Commandos must stop Zemo from firing his cannon. But Cap realizes that Zemo is working on a secret invention in his laboratory. So to ensure that the Nazis could not use his secret invention against Allied troops, Cap must confront Zemo from unveiling his secret invention before the Nazi’s use it…
