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Tokia Square

Tokia Square

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Asia in One Bite -Discover Croydon's Newest Kept Secret!Sushi Train, Hotpot & BBQ, Fried Chicken, Dimsum, Chinese, Korean, Indian, Thai
Tokia Square is Croydon's newest Asian food hall, bringing together 13 unique brands under one roof. From sushi trains to sizzling BBQs, and bold Korean flavours to fragrant Thai curries, it's a one-stop destination for authentic street food, comfort eats, and sweet treats – all at wallet-friendly prices.
Tokia Square is located on Level One of the iconic Grants Entertainment Centre in the heart of Croydon (CR0 1QB). Just a 10-minute walk from East and West Croydon stations, it's easily accessible via train, tram, and bus. Ample parking is available at the Q-Park Grants car park on Surrey Street, with additional nearby car parks for convenience. Whether you're travelling by public transport or car, getting here is quick and hassle-free – making Tokia Square the perfect destination for your next food adventure.
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‘It was a slap in the face when Ed Westwick got the role I auditioned for'
‘It was a slap in the face when Ed Westwick got the role I auditioned for'

Metro

time7 hours ago

  • Metro

‘It was a slap in the face when Ed Westwick got the role I auditioned for'

Sitting at a booth in Soho Theatre's cafe on a Thursday morning, actor Jassa Ahluwalia tells the story of being out for dinner when he received an email about a job that felt like his 'Hollywood moment'. 'It seemed that everything that I'd been working towards was coming to fruition. The universe had beautifully conspired to land this perfect role in my lap,' the 34-year-old tells Metro. Pulling out his phone and opening his inbox, he leans forward to read the message out loud: 'Character breakdown – this is a large supporting character. Note: It is crucial to the narrative and the character's story arc that Brooke is convincingly accepted in aristocratic circles as white British. The character is currently written as having Indian heritage on his mother's side.' 'They were describing me ,' he recalls. Born to a white English mum and a brown Punjabi dad in 1990, Jassa couldn't believe his luck that the TV pirate series, Sandokan, set in South Asia, was being made and he had a chance to play the role of Lord James Brooke. 'It felt like the acting industry was listening, paying attention and caring,' he remembers, his eyes widening at the memory. His self-tape — a short video where Jassa spoke about his heritage and read lines — led to an invitation for a screen test, and in November 2023, Jassa made his way to Bang Studios, just a stone's throw from where he sits today. 'Even just talking about it, my stomach's remembering the emotion. I was tingling, I was so alive,' the actor says. 'It sounds ridiculous, but I was trying to find ways to stay grounded. They had a miniature Buddha with a little tea light in the loo. I had a moment with it, touching its feet while thinking of how far I'd come to get to where I was. I was saying 'Thank you'.' After hair and makeup, Jassa was guided to a room filled with casting directors and producers, all crowded behind a desk with monitors. Over 30 minutes, he performed a scene under lights and cameras, partly in Punjabi, which was, he says, requested by the room. As the meeting ended with hugs, the word 'perfect' was lobbed around, and Jassa felt things couldn't have gone any better. However, on December 15, he got a rejection email. It praised 'utterly wonderful' Jassa for his 'beautiful work', but told him they weren't going to be progressing with him. When Jassa asked for more detailed feedback, he says he was told there was 'nothing constructive to pass on'. 'It was heartbreaking. I didn't know how it was possible to nail it so hard and still not get the gig,' he admits. As an actor since his teens, Jassa was accustomed to the rejection process, so he picked himself up and moved on. That was, until he read in the press a few months later that the role he had auditioned for — Lord James Brooke — had been given to Gossip Girl star Ed Westwick. It was 'like a slap in the face', remembers Jassa. 'They wanted the guy from Gossip Girl that people knew, and all that specificity and vulnerability that I shared didn't count for anything. The whole experience made me feel unimportant – my mix was just a tick box for a second, but it wasn't actually important. 'A little bit of my love for the industry died at that moment. I thought, 'F**k this, why am I pouring my heart and soul into this business?'' Sandokan is a reboot of an Italian TV series that aired in 1976 and was sold to 85 countries. Fremantle-owned Lux Vide is now putting a new spin on it with Can Yaman taking the lead role. It will air on the Italian state broadcaster RAI and be distributed worldwide. Set in the mid-19th century on the island of Borneo, the native Dayak tribes are dominated by ruthless Brits. Sandokan doesn't initially pick a side, but when he marries the daughter of the British consul, Marianne (Alanah Bloor), he begins to fight against colonial powers with his motley crew. The synopsis teases that pirate hunter Lord James Brooke (Ed Westwick) 'will stop at nothing to capture Sandokan and win Marianne's heart.' Angeliqa Devi, who is Bengali, has been announced as playing Brooke's mother, Hita. Jassa says that 'unless there's been a radical change to the script' Ed's character is still mixed. To Jassa's knowledge, an important part of the plot is that people are made to believe that Hita is a servant, not Brooke's parent. The rejection felt extra painful, admits Jassa, because he struggled with an 'obsessive desperation' to succeed due to a complex relationship with his mixed identity. 'It's no coincidence that I associate performing with a feeling of belonging because of an early happy memory I have of dancing Bhangra as a kid on the streets in India,' he explains with a smile, showing a photo from the trip. 'I was always unconsciously trying to get back to that.' Jassa studied at a subsidised arts program in Leicestershire throughout his school years, which made him feel that an acting career was 'tangibly achievable.' His youthful optimism felt well-placed when he landed a role on the BBC coming-of-age series Some Girls, playing lovable bad boy Rocky in 2012. 'I had a few years of things snowballing with parts in Casualty, Peaky Blinders, Ripper Street and The Whale. I was around a crowd of people, like John Boyega and David Gyasi, who were bubbling then blowing up. I thought it was going to happen for me, and then… it didn't. 'There had been a shift in the industry towards trying to tell more representative stories, but my voice wasn't welcome in that conversation,' he says of the 2010s. 'It was surface-level, productions just wanted to look diverse.' Jassa became increasingly frustrated with a landscape where the role of mixed-race characters felt more like an exercise rather than a thoughtful process, despite being the fastest-growing demographic in the UK. He cites one episode of Line of Duty where they say one of the suspects is mixed race [in the opener of season five, Vihaan Malhotra is asked to describe the woman who has been blackmailing him], 'but they don't say what mix, but everyone is like 'cool, understood'.' In 2019, Jassa felt a desire to take action after a follower responded to a video of him speaking Punjabi on social media, expressing shock at his fluency due to him being 'only half'. The actor quickly replied that he was 'both, not half', which went on to become a popular hashtag, as well as a TEDx Talk, documentary, and a book deal. As he grew more vocal, Jassa also became increasingly keen to incorporate his heritage into his acting. 'I wanted to bring my Punjabi-ness to work, because for years it felt like it was going to limit me,' he explains. 'It wasn't somebody explicitly sitting me down and saying, 'You should never talk about your Punjabi heritage', but the little signals I got were that to get ahead, you need to conform as much as you possibly can.' When asked what needs to change to strip these attitudes, Jassa — who is a member of Equity, the UK's trade union for the performing arts and entertainment industries — has a list ready and reaches into his rucksack to pull out a notebook filled with pages of scribbles. Although, he barely needs to glance at them: equality, finances, and intention need to be addressed, he explains. 'In any recruitment process, you expect people to be treated the same. I was asked in my audition to riff in Punjabi. Was Ed Westwick asked to do that?' Moving to his next point, he says: 'It all comes down to money. We're living in a time where the arts are increasingly under attack, so people in power are making safer choices, which uphold what has gone before. 'We're not getting any radical shift forward in this climate, so audiences are being deprived of incredible, world-changing, creative work from talented people who need to prioritise feeding their families, so leave the industry. 'Ed's involvement was probably a lot easier to justify to the finance team than mine, but we need to be thinking of why we are telling stories. Is it a white presenting mixed character for exotic dramatic intrigue, or because they are exploring an underrepresented part of history with sensitivity and authenticity?' As Jassa gets more passionate in his point-making, his voice shakes, and the actor admits: 'I find it hard to balance my personal emotions with my rational union brain.' However, the reason behind it all is simple, he adds: 'These stories should be told because we should be reflecting the society we live in, so everyone feels seen.' More Trending As for Jassa himself, he's in a happy place and is focused on writing more books, spreading his message further to challenge misconceptions and making changes through his role in the union. As he gets set to cycle off to his next engagement, he says: 'Now that I feel I have found a sense of home within myself, I'm not craving it as much from performance. 'I am no longer content to quietly pass as white, I want to assert my Punjabi heritage. I want mixed people on screen as they are, not as ethnically ambiguous shapeshifters. 'Being a chameleon is part of the joy of being an actor, but I want to play with my true colours.' View More » Metro has contacted Fremantle's Lux Vide for comment . Follow Jassa on Instagram here. Do you have a story you'd like to share? Get in touch by emailing Share your views in the comments below. MORE: I sold a bikini on a preloved site – now I'm wondering who bought it MORE: We went out with London's 'pickpocket hunter' to watch him sniff out thieves MORE: I'm a part time witch and use my powers to get back at my exes

Trainspotting star blasts trigger warning for Irvine Welsh's new book
Trainspotting star blasts trigger warning for Irvine Welsh's new book

Scottish Sun

time19 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Trainspotting star blasts trigger warning for Irvine Welsh's new book

Welsh's follow-up to his best-seller has been branded 'juvenile' and 'embarrassing' after women characters were described using phrases 'posh f***y' and 'chunky bird' and a slur for Chinese was printed Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A TRAINSPOTTING star has hit out at a trigger warning being included on Irvine Welsh's new book. Actor Simon Weir, 52, has defended the writer after he was slammed for using racist and misogynistic terms in Men In Love. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 Irvine Welsh has released his latest novel, Men in Love 2 Trainspotting star Simon Weir has hit out over a trigger warning Credit: Andrew Barr Welsh's follow-up to his best-seller has been branded 'juvenile' and 'embarrassing' after women characters were described using phrases 'posh f***y' and 'chunky bird' and a slur for Chinese was printed. Fears over the book's content saw publishers force him to include a disclaimer. Simon — who played Jailhouse in film T2 — has been helping Welsh promote Men In Love across the country. He told The Scottish Sun on Sunday: 'The trigger warning is an unnecessary nonsense. 'What do you expect from an Irvine Welsh book? 'People would be disappointed if there wasn't offensive language. 'But the point that Irvine was making on tour repeatedly is these are the words of fictional characters. 'They are not the views of the author.' Men In Love picks up where 1993's Trainspotting left off, with protagonist Mark Renton on the run after ripping off pals Sick Boy, Spud and Begbie following a drug deal. Chapters are told from the point of view of the characters as they attempt to kick their heroin and alcohol addictions to pursue romance. Huge blaze breaks out at Scots church as fire crews race to tackle flames Potential partners are described as 'willowy' and 'toothsome', while women 'must' have 'mental health issues' which are 'best to err on the side of anorexia, rather than obesity'. Another character is called a 'specky shaftoid' for wearing glasses. Welsh, 66, grew up in Leith, Edinburgh, the working-class son of a dock worker and a waitress. He says the language used is an accurate portrayal of attitudes the late 80s in the capital's council estates where Men In Love is set. An 'author's note' inserted against his will says the work 'aims to replicate the speech patterns commonly used by many people' and is 'not an endorsement (or even condemnation) of such behaviours'. Simon, from Hardgate, near Glasgow, added: 'Language evolves all the time and phrases that were used 30 or 40 years ago are not used now. 'I am worried about any censorship of this sort because it could change dramatic scenes and storylines if you can't use the language of a character or of that era. 'But if you really are easily offended then you probably should not be reading an Irvine Welsh novel.' Simon had to film his own offensive scene when he went full-frontal for his role in Trainspotting 2. That's after his character goes 'mental' when he realises he is being secretly filmed while having sex with a prostitute by Sick Boy (Jonny Lee Miller) who blackmails her clients. He recalls: 'When I went for the audition Danny Boyle just held up a pair of boots and went, 'That's your costume'. So I knew it was full on from the start.' However, Oscar-winning director Danny was so impressed by the Scot's performance he gave his uncredited character a name. Simon adds: 'The part was originally just called Punter Two. But Danny had asked me to just ad-lib some dialogue so I came up with this horrific line, where I shout 'Give it to me Jailhouse-style doll.' 'I was expecting that to get cut, but Danny said he loved it and told me 'You're no longer Punter Two, I'm going to call you jailhouse'. So I got a credit at the end of the film too.' Fraser Hudghton, director of Freedom Speech Union Scotland, said: 'Irvine Welsh's work is a rip-roaring ride through Scottish working class life. It is fearless fiction. "You're not reading the Trainspotting sequel and mistaking it for Woman's Weekly. New writers are forced to self-censor just to be published - cutting off the creative juice at source. "Just think of all the brilliant working class Scottish writers who can't get a book deal today just in case they upset someone with blue hair. It's a sin; publishers should quit deferring to DEI voodoo-meisters and get on with the job of letting everyone be heard.' Publisher Jonathan Cape has been approached for comment.

Muhammad Ali's brother dies aged 82 as 'extraordinary bond' hailed in tributes
Muhammad Ali's brother dies aged 82 as 'extraordinary bond' hailed in tributes

Daily Mirror

timea day ago

  • Daily Mirror

Muhammad Ali's brother dies aged 82 as 'extraordinary bond' hailed in tributes

Muhammad Ali's younger brother Rahaman has passed away (Image: Stephen J. Cohen/Getty Images) Muhammad Ali's younger brother Rahaman has passed away at the age of 82, the Muhammad Ali Center has announced. Rahaman died on August 1 after battling an illness, having spent the final weeks of his life in a hospice in his hometown of Louisville. "You can't tell Muhammad's story without mentioning Rahaman," DeVone Holt, President and CEO of the Muhammad Ali Center, said. "He was one of the most constant sources of support for Muhammad during this career and their relationship was a true example of what it means to be 'my brother's keeper.'" Rahaman was also a professional boxer and had a 14-3 record, retiring from the sport in 1972 after he was knocked out by Jack O'Halloran. Rahaman would regularly spar with his brother and Muhammad's daughter Hana spoke of their "extraordinary bond" in an emotional tribute to her uncle. "Today, the last living member of my father's immediate family returned to heaven," Hana wrote. "My Uncle, lovingly known as Rock, was a sweet, gentle soul with a heart as big as the world. "He had that same sparkle in his eye that my father had… that same light, that same mischief, that same love. They were close their entire lives, brothers by blood, but friends by choice. Even as children, their bond was extraordinary. READ MORE: Why Muhammad Ali might have had a very different opinion on Jake Paul to what you'd think READ MORE: 'I'm Muhammad Ali's grandson - I feel so much pressure but I have a crazy opportunity' "My father loved his brother like he was his own child. I can just picture them now, reunited in heaven… playing Cowboys and Indians with the broomsticks they used to find in Mama Bird and Papa Cash's closet. "Daddy always insisted on being the Cowboy, and Rock the Indian. Or maybe they're back to one of their favourite games, Daddy convincing Rock to throw actual rocks at him so he could prove how fast he was by dodging them. "Whatever they're doing up there, I know it's full of joy, laughter, and the kind of brotherly love that helped shape our family. Uncle Rock had a heart of gold. "He never needed a spotlight to shine, and I believe that now, from above, he and Daddy are part of something bigger… something beautiful… something meant to help heal this broken world. "God bless you, Uncle Rock. You will be missed. You will be forever loved. And when my time comes, I hope you and Daddy will both be there, waiting to welcome me home." Join our new WhatsApp community and receive your daily dose of Mirror Football content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. Sky Sports discounted Premier League and EFL package Sky has slashed the price of its Essential TV and Sky Sports bundle ahead of the 2025/26 season, saving members £192 and offering more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more. Sky will show at least 215 live Premier League games next season, an increase of up to 100 more.

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