
Age: 63
female
Sophie Aldred was born in Greenwich, London, and brought up in nearby Blackheath. After leaving school, she attended Manchester University, where she took a degree in drama. From university she sang in working men's clubs to obtain her Equity Card, then worked in a children's theatre, appearing in a fringe show, "Underground Men," at a pub theatre in London to get an agent, followed by more children theatre. She was appearing in "Fiddler on the Roof" with Topol in Manchester when she landed the part of Ace. At the same time as appearing in "Doctor Who," she presented a series for young children called "Corners" and later "Melvin and Maureen's Music-a-grams," which combined her acting and music skills. She has appeared in a number of theatre productions including a tour of "Daisy Pulls it Off" in which she played the lead, and she played Marjorie Pinchwite in the 1993 West End production of "Lust," a version of "The Country Wife." In 1995 she worked for the Children's Channel on satellite and also Love Call Live for Anglia television with David 'Kid' Jensen. In 1996, she co-authored with effects designer Mike Tucker a book looking at her time in Doctor Who called "Ace!"

In the brutal, ever-shifting world of 9th-century Scandinavia and the British Isles, Gunbjorn Kætilmundsson—a battle-scarred Viking of uncertain loyalty—fights for survival, honor, and the chance to seize a crown, as rival chieftains, ambitious jarls, and cunning kings vie for power in a land where the line between friend and foe is as thin as a blade. "Crowns of the North" is a gritty, character-driven historical drama in the tradition of "Vikings," "Vikings: Valhalla," and "The Last Kingdom." The series blends epic battles, political intrigue, and personal vendettas, set against the backdrop of the Viking Age’s most turbulent decades. The tone is raw, immersive, and unflinching—balancing visceral action with intimate character moments and the constant tension between survival and ambition.
