To be one of only three original cast members still standing at the start of the last season (alongside Alexander Dreymon’s lead Uhtred and Eliza Butterworth’s pious Lady Aelswith) clearly means a lot. Cox talks about the character of Brida with affection and compassion – no easy task for a character capable of such sadism. In season five, Brida is Uhtred’s enemy. But it didn’t begin that way. Brida’s suffering began in childhood when she, like Uhtred, was kidnapped and raised by Danes. After their adopted Viking father was slaughtered, the young couple set out on different journeys. Uhtred’s, Alexander Dreymon tells Den of Geek, is about becoming comfortable with his dual identity of Saxon and Dane. Brida’s involves no such serenity. A fervent believer in Danish supremacy, for her, fighting for Daneland is the only true path. Season five introduces daughter Vibeke (Emili Ackchina), a daughter that Brida never thought she’d have after being cursed in season one not to bear children. Curse lifted, Brida became pregnant by her Viking partner Cnut, whom she killed when she learned he had plotted the murder of her last love, Ragnar. In season five, we meet Vibeke as a child, having been raised by her mother as part of a Danish warrior cult in Iceland. Brida is an adoring, loving mother, says Cox, grateful to be able to play a softer side to a character whose axe does much of her talking. “There’s such a deep understanding between the two of them,” Cox continues. “Although Uhtred had a lot of women, I personally don’t believe that anybody got him as much as Brida, and he really got Brida.” Emotionally speaking, Uhtred is the most important person in Brida’s life apart from her daughter. She’s still half of his life and all of his madness, as Uhtred described her in season three? “That’s how I want to see it, definitely.” Scary, but also strangely content, says Cox. The season five opener finds Brida as happy as she could be, with a cult-like army of followers and a mission from the Gods. “From her point of view, big injustice has happened to her and she’s ready to take revenge and to destroy the people who did that to her. Also, from her point of view, it’s just the right thing to do, because being Danish or being Viking, it’s the right way to live. She thinks that if she goes over to conquer England, that is a good thing to do because she’s saving people.” Has Cox made her peace with filming The Last Kingdom’s final ever season? (A Netflix movie, not announced at the time we speak and about which the actors were sworn to secrecy, is currently in production) “It’s quite sad. It’s the last time I’m putting on these shoes and I’m putting on her clothes and taking her axe. That felt different, knowing I’m not coming back to Budapest with everyone else, that was the saddest part about it.”