Sophie Ward

Actress

Birthday December 30, 1964

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Hammersmith, London, England

Age 59 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#16471 Most Popular

1964

Sophie Anna Ward (born 30 December 1964) is an English stage and screen actress, and a writer of non-fiction and fiction.

Sophie Anna Ward was born in Hammersmith, London, in 1964, the eldest of the three daughters of Alexandra (née Malcolm) and actor Simon Ward, one of whom, Kitty, went on to marry to comedian Michael McIntyre.

In childhood, Sophia Ward trained at the Anna Scher Theatre.

She earned a BA honours degree in English with Philosophy from the Open University.

1977

Other early films included Full Circle (1977), Return to Oz (1985) playing beautiful princess Mombi II, Little Dorrit (1987) and A Summer Story (1988), and she also portrayed a dancer in Roxy Music's 1982 music video "Avalon".

She has appeared in several Glasgow Citizens' Theatre productions including Private Lives (as Amanda), Don Carlos (as Queen Elizabeth) and most strikingly in Hamlet as Ophelia.

1980

Ward had long been considered a "Face of the 1980s" as a Vogue model.

1982

In 1982 she had a role in the Academy Award-winning best short film, A Shocking Accident.

Ward acted in the 1982 Academy Award-winning short film, A Shocking Accident.

1983

In 1983, at the age of 19, she had a brief, non-speaking role at the very end of the Tony Scott vampire movie The Hunger; in the credits, her character is listed as "Girl In London House".

1985

As an actress, she played Elizabeth Hardy, the female lead in Barry Levinson's Young Sherlock Holmes (1985), and in other feature film roles including in Cary Joji Fukunaga's period drama Jane Eyre (2011), and Jane Sanger's horror feature, Swiperight (2020).

Another of Ward's early film roles was in the film Young Sherlock Holmes (1985), directed by Barry Levinson.

1988

She has worked with Susan Sarandon in The Hunger directed by Tony Scott, Liv Ullmann in , directed by Mauro Bolognini, and Elizabeth Taylor in Young Toscanini (1988), directed by Franco Zeffirelli.

Her television work includes the mini-series A Dark-Adapted Eye with Helena Bonham Carter and the fantasy Dinotopia.

Ward married veterinary surgeon Paul Hobson in 1988, and the couple have two sons, born in 1989 and 1993.

1996

After Ward became involved with Korean-American poet and writer Rena Brannan, and in 1996 Ward came out as a lesbian, Hobson and Ward divorced.

2003

Her later films include Out of Bounds (2003), in which she co-stars with Sophia Myles and Celia Imrie, and Book of Blood (2008), co-starring Jonas Armstrong and Reg Fuller.

2004

On television she played Dr Helen Trent in British police drama series Heartbeat from 2004 to 2006, the character Sophia Byrne in the series Holby City from 2008 to 2010, the role of Lady Ellen Hoxley in the series Land Girls from 2009 to 2011, and that of Lady Verinder in the mini-series The Moonstone (2016).

She has had a variety of other roles on stage and in short and feature films.

From 2004 until 2006, Ward had the recurring role of Dr Helen Trent in long-running ITV drama Heartbeat.

2005

Ward and Brannan had a civil partnership ceremony in 2005, followed by marriage after it was legalised in 2014.

Ward and Brannan divide their time between England and the United States.

2008

In 2008, Ward joined the cast of Holby City in a recurring role as Sophia Byrne.

2009

She appeared in the BBC series Land Girls from 2009 to 2011.

Her role in the first (2009) series of Land Girls earned her a regional (Midlands) RTS Television Award for best acting performance (by a female) in that year.

Especially since beginning her advanced academic work, Ward has been writing professionally, including for newspapers The Guardian, The Times, and The Spectator, and the online journalism network, The Conversation.

2011

She also appeared in Cary Fukunaga's Jane Eyre (2011).

2014

Ward has become known as an LGBT activist, and her 2014 long-form essay, a strong statement regarding equality of marriage rights, was published by Guardian Shorts, The Guardian's e-book publishing house.

It later appeared in serialised form in issues of the newspaper.

2016

Ward has hosted several of the annual European Diversity Awards, including in 2016, 2019, and 2021.

2018

She has written for The Guardian, The Times, and The Spectator, won the 2018 Royal Academy Pin Drop Award for her short story "Sunbed", and had her first novel, Love and Other Thought Experiments (2020), longlisted for both the Desmond Elliott Prize and the Booker Prize in its publication year.

She and her wife, Korean-American poet and writer, Rena Brannan, divide their time between England and the United States.

While undertaking her post-graduate study, Ward wrote a short work, "Sunbed", which won the 2018 Royal Academy Pin Drop Award for new writers, in the short story category.

2019

Ward returned to higher education, earning a PhD from Goldsmiths, University of London, in 2019, in English and Comparative Literature, focusing on the intersection between literature and philosophy, including the use of narrative and thought experiments in philosophy, the philosophy of mind in particular.

She returned to higher education, earning a PhD in English and Comparative Literature at Goldsmiths, University of London in 2019, where, according to Ward, her research focused on "thought experiments in philosophy of mind and the use of narrative in philosophy, looking at issues of consciousness and AI, and the meeting between literature and philosophy."

Ward started work as an actress when she was aged 10, and has worked in film, television and theatre.

She trained as a dancer under ballerina Merle Park.

2020

Ward's debut novel, Love and Other Thought Experiments was published in 2020 by Corsair, an imprint of Little, Brown Book Group.

It was longlisted for both the Desmond Elliott Prize and the Booker Prize in its publication year.

Ward's second novel The Schoolhouse was released in 2022.