Tokyo (Money Heist)


Tokyo is a fictional character in the Netflix series Money Heist, portrayed by Úrsula Corberó. The de facto protagonist of the series, she is the unreliable narrator and a runaway robber who is scouted by the Professor to participate in his heists.

The character

Tokyo is a thief on the run from the police after a failed robbery in which her boyfriend was killed. She was hired by the Professor to help in carrying out a heist of the Royal Mint in Madrid. Together with the other seven robbers chosen for the heist, she is taken to a secluded villa where they plan the heist for five months. The Professor asks each of the robbers to choose a city name to hide their identities during the robbery, and she chooses Tokyo.

Development

The producers found Tokyo among the hardest characters to develop, as they were originally looking for an older actress to play the character who had nothing to lose before meeting the Professor. Úrsula Corberó eventually landed the role for bringing a playful energy to the role; her voice was heavily factored in during casting, as she was the first voice the audience hears in the show. Corberó described Tokyo at the beginning of the show as "a girl who really lacks self-esteem, has been very lonely, has had a very bad time, has not had a father figure at home", resulting in a vulnerability that the character doesn't know how to express. Actor Álvaro Morte regarded Tokyo as one of the Professor's favourite gang members, since both characters confide in and confront each other like best friends despite being opposite sexes.

Characterisation

Sandra Faginas of Spanish newspaper La Razón praised the character, saying Tokyo was "a wonderful cocktail of passion and reason" that was "born splendidly in script". She regarded Tokyo as a "free soul touching every companion and approaching them in different ways: Rio with passionate tenderness, the Professor with cold respect, Nairobi with joy and attunement, and Berlin with challenging discipline". John Doyle of The Globe and Mail saw Corbero "as a strong female lead, her character doesn't conform to much hat you'd see in an equivalent British or American crime drama". Meanwhile, Alfonso Rivadeneyra García of Peruvian newspaper El Comercio disliked the hypersexualization of Tokyo in part 3 as fan service. Keyvan Azh of German Focus regarded Tokyo as a one-dimensional protagonist relying on the "cheap stylistic device" of tell, don't show. For the role of Tokyo, Corberó was nominated for the Premios Feroz in 2017 in the category Best Leading Actress of a Series, and won the Premios IRIS in 2018 for Best Actress.