Misplaced Pages

Toph Beifong: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 23:03, 22 November 2006 edit65.10.47.225 (talk)No edit summary← Previous edit Latest revision as of 02:33, 5 January 2025 edit undoCitation bot (talk | contribs)Bots5,440,006 edits Altered title. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by Whoop whoop pull up | #UCB_webform 6/43 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Infobox Avatar: The Last Airbender character| {{Short description|Fictional character in ''Avatar: The Last Airbender''}}
{{cleanup rewrite|date=October 2021}}
| image = ]
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2024}}
| name = Toph Bei Fong
{{Infobox character
| nationality = ] (]) ]
| name = Toph Beifong
| image = Toph Beifong.png
| caption = Toph Beifong in '']''.
| series = ]/]
| first = {{Plainlist|
* '''Original series''':
* "]" (2006){{efn|Prior to her first full appearance in "]", Toph appears to ] in a vision in "]".}}
* '''''The Legend of Korra''''':
* "]" (2012)}}
| last = {{Plainlist|
* '''Original series''':
* "]" (2008)
* '''''The Legend of Korra''''':
* "]" (2014)}}
| creator = {{ubl|]|]|]}}
| lbl1 = Voice by
| data1 = {{ubl|] (2006–2011)|] and ] ('']'')|] (''Aang: The Last Airbender'')<ref>{{Cite web |last=Graves |first=Sabina |date=11 April 2024 |title=Aang: The Last Airbender Movie Has Found Its Cast, Including Dave Bautista |url=https://gizmodo.com/last-airbender-animated-trilogy-aang-first-movie-2025-1851404099 |access-date=11 April 2024 |website=]}}</ref><br/>Julia Gu ('']'')<br/>Vivian Vencer (2022–present; video games)}}
| lbl2 = Portrayed by
| data2 = {{ubl|] (])}}
| gender = Female | gender = Female
| children = ] (older daughter)<br/>Suyin Beifong (younger daughter)
| hair = Dark Brown(Almost Black)
| nationality = ]
| eyes = Pale green (foggy because of ])
| lbl21 = Bending element
| age = 12
| data21 = {{hlist|Earthbending|metalbending}}
| position = ] Master (''] Style'')
| lbl23 = Age
| appearance = "]" (''vision''),<br/>"]" (''actual appearance'')
| data23 = 12 in ''Avatar: The Last Airbender''<br/>13–14 in ]<br/>82 in ''The Legend of Korra'' and ]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.cbr.com/the-legend-of-korra-how-old-avatar-toph-sequel-series/|title=The Legend of Korra: Just How Old Is Avatar's Toph in the Sequel Series?|last=Roth|first=Rachel|date=26 August 2020|website=]|access-date=29 April 2024}}</ref>
| voice = ]
}} }}
'''Toph Bei Fong''' (北方芙) is a ] in the ] animated television series '']''. She is a ] ] who has agreed to teach ] ] in an effort to help him fulfill his duty as the Avatar to defeat the imperialistic ] and restore balance to the world<ref name="biography">{{cite web|url=http://www.musogato.com/avatar/toph.html|title=Biography of ''Avatar: The Last Airbender'' character: Toph|work=Musogato.com|accessdate=2006-07-09}}</ref>. '''Toph Beifong''' ({{lang-zh|c=北方|p=Běifāng Tuòfú}}) is a ]al ] in ]'s animated television series '']'' and '']'', voiced by ] in the original series and ] as an adult and ] as an elder in the sequel series. She will be portrayed by ] in Season 2 of the ].<ref>{{cite web|first=Nellie|last=Andreeva|date=19 September 2024|title='Avatar: The Last Airbender' Finds Its Toph: Miya Cech Cast In Season 2 Of Netflix Series|url=https://deadline.com/2024/09/avatar-the-last-airbender-toph-miya-cech-netflix-1236094987/|website=]|access-date=22 September 2024}}</ref>


Toph is recognized as a prodigy<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2020/sep/01/ive-seen-grown-men-cry-why-avatar-the-last-airbender-still-touches-millions|title='I've seen grown men cry' – why Avatar: The Last Airbender still touches millions|date=1 September 2020|first=Aina|last=Khan|work=The Guardian}}</ref> of earthbending, which is the ability to ] manipulate, reshape and control stone, sand, dirt, and, later, metal. Because she was born blind, and her parents believed that her condition limited her capacity to learn and use the skill safely, they had a tutor teach her only basic earthbending. She later learned more advanced earthbending secretly from the badgermoles (fictional blind creatures that naturally earthbend). She eventually becomes the first person to develop the ability to "bend" metal as well. Toph has been blind since birth, but from her observations of badgermoles, she had learned to locate objects and their movements by sensing their vibrations in the earth around her.
{{spoilers}}


Toph was introduced in the second season of ''Avatar''. She travels with the protagonist ] as his earthbending teacher, shown to have an abrasive, conceited and sometimes stubborn personality which leads to clashes with her peers. Toph proves herself a steadfast ally to Avatar Aang and eventually ]. As a ], the character has received universal acclaim, quickly becoming a fan favorite.
== History ==
Toph is the one and only child of the wealthy Bei Fong family, whose symbol is a flying ], who resides in the Earth Kingdom town of Gaoling. Because she is blind, ], especially her father, made it a point to protect her at all times, even hiding her existence. Despite her handicap, Toph has developed special skills that make her a very formidable Earthbender. However, she kept them secret from her family and Master Yu, her Earthbending teacher. Toph fought frequently in ''Earth Rumble'', an underground Earthbending tournament, under the alias "The Blind Bandit." By the time Aang and his friends discover Toph at the tournament, she had won her way to become the current champion, then holding a 42-0 win-loss record.


== Story == ==Character overview==
===Creation and conception===
In the episode "]," Aang was searching for an Earthbending teacher who "listens to the earth." After watching Toph's performance, he believes she is that person and challenges her to a duel (for a chance to speak to her) when Xin Fu, the tournament host, calls for volunteer challengers. With the help of his airbending, Aang easily bests Toph, upsetting her winning streak. She, however, does not give Aang a chance to speak to her and immediately leaves the arena.
Toph was initially conceived as a sixteen-year-old boy that was athletic and muscular, designed to be a foil to ]. Her prototype design is featured in the show's intro as the earthbender.<ref>'''Avatar Extras''' for episode "The Blind Bandit".</ref> As the series progressed and the time came closer to introduce an earthbender who would join the main characters, head writer ] suggested that they create contrast by designing a little girl who is able to defeat strong, adult earthbenders; some of the staff found this humorous, but it was initially rejected by ''Avatar'' co-creator ]. Following several long discussions, Konietzko stopped fighting the idea and warmed up to it, after which Toph was made female and introduced into the series, becoming one of Konietzko's favorite characters. The character's original design was recycled into the appearances of minor characters The Boulder and Sud.<ref name="ToonZoneNews">{{cite news|url = http://www.toonzone.net/2008/04/toon-zone-news-interviews-bryan-konietzko-and-mike-dimartino-avatar/|title = Toon Zone News Interviews Bryan Konietzko and Mike DiMartino on "Avatar"|date = 22 April 2008|first = Ed|last = Liu|publisher = toonzone.net}}{{Dead link|date=December 2023|bot=InternetArchiveBot|fix-attempted=yes}}</ref> Her original design greatly influenced the appearance of ] in '']''. Her Earth Rumble outfit, the clothing she wears for the majority of ''Avatar: The Last Airbender'', was inspired by European fashion styles.<ref>DVD commentary for "The Blind Bandit"</ref> Her fancy dress was modeled after the traditional clothing of the Chinese ].<ref name=kd-97>{{cite book |last1=Konietzko |first1=Bryan |last2=DiMartino |first2=Michael Dante |date=2010| title=Avatar, The Last Airbender: The Art of the Animated Series. |publisher=Dark Horse |isbn=978-1-62115-798-4 |page=97}}</ref>


Toph uses a unique fighting style of earthbending, based on the ] style.<ref name=kd-97/>
Aang later finds Toph at the Bei Fong estate, and he is eventually able to talk to her about his quest and need for an Earthbending teacher. However, before Toph can make a decision, she and Aang are kidnapped by the Earthbending tournament stable.


Toph was favored by the creators to return in ''The Legend of Korra'' after the appearances of both ] and ], DiMartino writing that it "never quite made sense" for there to be a trip to the swamp, where she was located, during the third season. In the following season, she was meant to serve as a foil to ] with her "gruff mentoring style" contrasting the reserved Korra. Her design became a subject of difficulty for the staff, who wanted her to return to the size of her twelve-year-old self from the original series despite flashbacks in the earlier part of ''The Legend of Korra'' showing her as having grown in height. Konietzko was content with the staff's wishes but wanted her shortened height to come from her having become hunched since then. Artists had issues carrying out this design, resulting in multiple takes.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Legend of Korra: The Art of the Animated Series Book Four: Balance|page=40|year=2015|first1=Michae Dante|last1=DiMartino|first2=Bryan|last2=Konietzko|publisher=Dark Horse Books|isbn= 978-1616556877}}</ref>
The tournament wrestlers demand a ransom, which Katara, Sokka, Master Yu, and Toph's father pay, but only Toph is released. The wrestlers announce that they will be taking Aang to the Fire Nation instead, prompting Katara to plead Toph for her help in rescuing Aang. Her father interjects, claiming that his daughter is blind, tiny, helpless, and fragile, and unable to help them. Toph, however, disagrees and steps forward, and she soon single-handedly defeats the entire tournament stable and the host, Xin Fu. Master Yu is speechless and awed by Toph's amazing Earthbending skill. Her father is silent.


===Personality and characteristics===
That night, Toph tries to reason with her parents that she is skillful at fighting and enjoys it, and that she should be allowed to live a normal life like any other kid. She hopes that all of this new information does not change the way they feel about her. Toph's father replies that it does not change his love for her as a father, but it instead has made him realize that he has allowed her too much freedom. He plans to have guards watching over her all day long. Toph's protests are unheard.
Toph is fiercely independent, direct, belligerent, and practiced in taunting and insulting her opponents<ref name="The Blind Bandit" /> and on occasion her friends, particularly Sokka.<ref name="The Chase">{{cite episode | title = The Chase | episode-link = The Chase (Avatar: The Last Airbender) | series = Avatar: The Last Airbender | network = Nickelodeon | airdate = 26 May 2006 | season = 2 (Book 2) | number = 8}}</ref> On several occasions Toph appears picking her nose, spitting, and belching loudly. As she explained to Aang and his companions, she does this intentionally as a rebellion against the principles of refined culture that her aristocratic parents attempted to make her conform to. If the situation absolutely requires it, she actually knows how to behave in upper-class ] culture much better than Aang's companions do. She is usually covered in dirt, or as she calls it, "a healthy coating of earth".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.less-real.com/quotes/search/Toph+Bei+Fong|title=8 Quotes by Toph Bei Fong|publisher=lessreal|access-date=4 November 2014}}</ref>


In her advanced age, despite retaining much of her strength as an earthbender, Toph refuses to take part in prolonged conflicts, admitting that she is too old and lacks the energy for such endeavors.
Outside town, just as Aang and his friends are about to depart, Toph appears and claims that her father had changed his mind, saying that she was free to travel the world. Based on Katara's and Sokka's reactions, it is apparent (to the viewer) that Toph is lying and is simply running away from home, but it is unclear whether or not Aang realizes this. With his daughter's sudden absence, Toph's father concludes (incorrectly) that the Avatar has kidnapped his daughter and issues a large reward to Master Yu and Xin Fu to bring her back by any means necessary.


===Name===
Toph is currently a member of Aang's group of friends and serves as his Earthbending teacher. Aang refers to Toph as "] Toph"(meaning Master Toph) in the episode "]."
{{more citations needed|section|date=June 2021}}
In "The Serpent's Pass", Toph's passport reads {{lang|zh|土國頭等護照北方拓芙}} (tǔ guó tóu děng hù zhào běi fāng tuò fú), which translates as "Earth Kingdom First Class Passport: Beifong Toph". Here, her name means "supported lotus", which matches her parents' view of their daughter as a flower in need of protection. In "Tales of Ba Sing Se", her name is written as {{lang|zh|托夫}} (Tuō Fū), which is the phonetic transcription based on the official guide for foreign names. In "The Earth King", her name is reverted to {{lang|zh|拓芙}}. Her last name Beifong ({{lang|zh|北方}}) is close to the Mandarin pronunciation of the word "North" (běi fāng). The word {{lang|zh|托}} (Tuō) also means "to support in one's palm", or "drag" and is the word used for ],<ref>{{cite web|url=https://translate.google.com/?sl=zh-CN&tl=en#zh-CN/en/%E6%89%98|title=Official Google translation of 托}}</ref>{{better source needed|date=June 2021|reason=Google Translate is not a good tool for verified information}} and is also intended to sound like the English word "tough" and "]".<ref>{{Cite book|last=Van Hoey|first=Thomas|title=The Blending of Bending: World-building in Avatar: The Last Airbender and Legend of Korra.|year=2016|pages=11}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://screenrant.com/avatar-last-airbender-toph-guy-ember-island-players |title=Avatar: Why Toph Was A Guy In The Ember Island Players |publisher=] |date=24 September 2020 |access-date=24 September 2020}}</ref>{{failed verification|date=June 2021|reason=The source says nothing about sounding like the word "tough"}}


==Appearances==
In ], Toph recieves a letter from her mother who is apparently within the city, and judging from her letter, she has come to understand Toph. Toph goes to see her mother but is instead captured in an iron coffin by Xin Fu and Master Yu.
===''Avatar: The Last Airbender'' television series===
] voices the young Toph in ''Avatar: The Last Airbender''.]]


====Book Two: ''Earth''====
== Character ==
Toph's parents view her blindness as a disability and therefore keep her concealed.<ref name="The Blind Bandit">{{cite episode|title=The Blind Bandit|url=http://www.avatarspiritmedia.net/episode_guide.php?ep=206|airdate=5 May 2006|season=2|number=6|transcript=Avatar: The Last Airbender. Episode Transcript|transcript-url=http://www.avatarspiritmedia.net/transcripts.php?ep=206|credits=Director: Ethan Spaulding; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|series-link=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> Despite her handicap, Toph has developed special skills by keeping company with the blind 'badgermoles' that inhabited nearby caves.<ref name="The Firebending Masters">{{cite web|url=http://avatarthelastairbenderonline.com/synopsis-avatar-airbender-episodes/|title=Synopsis of Avatar: The Last Airbender Episodes, "The Firebending Masters", Episode 13, Season 3|access-date=15 July 2008|publisher=Nickelodeon}}</ref> By imitating their movements, Toph became a master of the martial art known as 'earthbending', but she kept her ability secret from her overprotective family. Toph fought frequently in ''Earth Rumble'', an earthbending ] tournament resembling ], under the alias "Blind Bandit". By the time Aang and his friends discover Toph at the tournament, she had become champion, holding a 42–0 win–loss record.<ref name="The Blind Bandit" /> However, Aang unintentionally beats her in a match when he tries to talk to her, as she could not sense air currents. When her parents learn about this and confine her further, Toph runs away to accompany Aang and his friends as Aang's earthbending instructor, although her parents believe she was kidnapped by Aang. Toph nearly leaves the group after feuding with Katara over not contributing to the group's teamwork, though rejoins them following a meeting with ] and encountering ] for the first time.<ref>{{cite episode|title= The Chase|date=26 May 2006|season=2|number=8|credits=Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino, Bryan Konietzko |series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|series-link= Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=]}}</ref> Toph successfully begins Aang's training of earthbending and slows the descent of Wan Shi Tong's Library, where the group learns the date of the next Day of Black Sun and inadvertently gains an advantage over the Fire Nation, as it sinks, though fails to prevent ] from being kidnapped by sandbenders.<ref>{{cite episode|title= The Library|date=14 July 2006|season=2|number=10|credits=Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino, Bryan Konietzko |series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|series-link= Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=]}}</ref> Due to Appa being the group's transportation, they are forced to travel on foot, journeying through Serpent's Pass and preventing a drill from entering Ba Sing Se. Now in the city, she infiltrates the Earth Kingdom Royal Palace, meeting Dai Li,<ref>Hedrick, Tim (writer) & MacMullan, Lauren (director). (22 September 2006). "City of Walls and Secrets". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 14. Nickelodeon.</ref> bonds with Katara,<ref>Estoesta, Joann, Wahlander, Lisa, Huebner, Andrew, Scheppke, Gary, MacMullan, Lauren, Mattila, Katie, Ridge, Justin, Volpe, Giancarlo (writers) & Spaulding, Ethan (director). (29 September 2006). "The Tales of Ba Sing Se". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 15. Nickelodeon.</ref> encounters Jet and reunites with Appa.<ref>Hedrick, Tim (writer) & MacMullan, Lauren (director). (6 November 2006). "Lake Laogai". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 17. Nickelodeon.</ref> Toph also learns to metalbend after she is captured in a metal cage by people who were sent by her parents to retrieve her. She realizes that metal contains small amounts of earth, which she can manipulate. She quickly escapes and traps her captors in the same small cage.
As the newest addition to Aang's party, Toph brings with her a totally new personality to the group. Unlike the nurturing Katara, flighty Aang or gruff but goofy Sokka, Toph is fiercely independent, sarcastic, direct, brutally frank, and confrontational. She appears to have the same carefree and adventurous personality as Aang, and she is very tomboyish in the way she acts and dresses - a contrast to the delicate doll her parents see her as. However, unlike Aang, who avoids fighting whenever possible, Toph loves battling and takes great pride in her Earthbending skills. She appears eager to prove that she is as strong as anyone who can see.


====Book Three: ''Fire''====
Toph's eagerness to prove that she can be independent has led to some initial difficulties with Aang and his friends. Toph insists that she can carry her own weight and often mistakes a simple friendly gesture as an act of pity for her blindness. Her encounter with ], however, has taught her that Aang, Katara, and Sokka care for her because they are friends, not because her disability makes them feel obligated to.
After the events of the Book 2 finale, Toph, alongside Sokka, Katara and the Southern Water Tribe, captured a Fire Nation ship. Once in the Fire Nation, she assumed the identity of a regular Fire Nation girl.
In "The Runaway", Toph uses her earthbending senses to foil a vendor's trick, and by bargaining and continuing to use her senses, she extracts more and more money from him. Katara is distressed by this, and scolds Toph for her immoral behavior, but later enlists her to pull a huge scam.
Katara fakes turning Toph over to the police in order to collect the reward money, with the assumption that Toph will metalbend her way out of prison and rejoin her. However, it is revealed that there is no reward money and the cells are made of wood, and Katara is shoved in jail alongside Toph. Aang and Sokka attempt to overtake their adversary Combustion Man, but Katara ends up busting herself and Toph out by being resourceful in her attempt to draw water for her bending.
Toph then is part of the invasion team, and she helps Aang get to Firelord Ozai's underground bunker. She later is seen riding on Appa after the invasion team's defeat.


In "The Western Air Temple", she arrives at the Western Air Temple with the Gaang and meets Zuko. She is accepting of him at first, urging Katara and Sokka to accept his help, but after she is burned by him, she too grows angry with him. When he reattempts to join their team, she happily accepts him on the grounds of Aang's acceptance.
Toph is brutally honest when criticizing others. She is vocal about her opinions on others regardless of status (the Avatar, Aang) or age (Uncle Iroh). Her occasional spoiled attitude or aloofness may be related to her being the only child of one of the richest families in the ]. Thanks to her time as a competitor and champion of the Earthbending Tournaments (in "]"), she is an expert in verbally taunting and insulting her opponents, and on occasion her friends (particularly non-bender Sokka). However, despite her many quirks, Toph has shown that she is a quick learner, and her courage and loyalty to her new friends seems very stable.
In the finale, Toph helps Sokka and Suki attack a Fire Nation airship. Suki hops off the ship in order to help Toph and Sokka get to safety. Toph is nearly knocked off the burning ship and killed, but Sokka rescues her and they are promptly retrieved by Suki. She later celebrates the Fire Lord's defeat with her friends in Iroh's tea shop.


===''Avatar: The Last Airbender'' comic series===
Toph and Katara seem to be polar opposites; while Katara is kind, welcoming, and supportive, Toph is tough, unyielding, and steadfast. This extends to their teaching styles to Aang. However, Toph eventually shows a bit of compromise to help Aang through his initial difficulty with earthbending. Despite occasional clashes or spats ("]"), Toph and Katara generally get along, perhaps if only for the fact that they are both girls.
====''The Promise''====
One of Toph's weaknesses involves personal hygiene. She is accustomed to lying on the ground, and walking everywhere barefoot leaving her soles quite soiled. However, most Earthbenders in the show walk barefoot, most likely so that their body is directly touching the earth at all times<ref name="biography"/>. Also, she has been seen belching loudly and picking her nose, and is usually covered in dirt or, as she calls it, "A healthy layer of earth".
In '']'' trilogy, Toph is revealed to have established the Beifong Metalbending Academy, an instructional institution to help earthbenders learn metalbending, shortly after the end of the television series. She chooses her three students (Penga, The Dark One and Ho Tun) on the basis of her meteorite bracelet shivering in their presence.<ref>''Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Promise'', Part 1</ref> Though claiming her motives behind founding the school were due to her love of metalbending, in actuality, she enjoys bossing people around. Initially worried her students are not capable of being metalbenders, they surprise her with their victory over Kunyo and his firebending students, renewing her confidence in them<ref>''Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Promise'', Part 2</ref> and she participates in the battle for Yu Dao.<ref>''Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Promise'', Part 3</ref>


====''The Rift''====
Despite her generally blunt and slightly crude nature, Toph is well-educated in the manners and bearings of high society--she merely consciously and consistently chooses to ignore them. She makes an exeption in one episode ("]"), when the group needs to go to a special party to see the Earth King, in order to give news of the solar eclipse, only to meet the head of the Dai Li, Long Feng.
In '']'' trilogy, Toph encounters her father for the first time since the series,<ref>''Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Rift'', Part 1</ref> though he refuses to acknowledge her as his daughter. It is further revealed that her parents broke up after the people they sent to bring Toph back had failed. Toph prevents the others from being killed by debris falling from the mine collapsing,<ref>''Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Rift'', Part 2</ref> including her father, who reconciles with her as she saves everyone. Following this, she passes out and has her students assist Aang in his battle against the spirit of Old Iron.<ref>''Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Rift'', Part 3</ref>


====''Smoke and Shadow''====
An ongoing joke concerning Toph's blindness is her lack of ability to discern anything that has been written or drawn. One example is during "]", when she becomes angry when Sokka suggests that Toph needs help putting up Appa posters. She becomes angry and spitefully puts up a poster, only to inadvertently place it backwards and for her to say "It's upside-down, isn't it?".
{{Empty section|date=April 2021}}


====''North and South''====
== Earthbending ==
{{Empty section|date=April 2021}}
]
Although blind, Toph has the unique ability to use Earthbending to "feel" even the most minute objects on the earth, including ants marching on the ground several meters away and the presence of trees and buildings. Through this heightened seismic sense, she can visualize where people are, their relative distance to her, and their physical build, but she can not see faces, as stated in "]." This sense is incredibly useful when fighting against fellow ]s, who often make contact with the ground or rip rocks from their surroundings, all of which cause vibrations which Toph feels. Because she can predict attacks as they begin and quickly react, her speed and agility also greatly benefit. This sense also helps her battle ]s, ]s, and other skilled fighters, as all attackers (short of ]s) normally require constant contact with the ground while launching attacks.


====''Imbalance''====
However, because Toph is dependent on vibrations in the earth, she is vulnerable to air-based attacks and thusly has great difficulty attacking Airbenders, as they are capable of gliding above the ground for short periods of time. Aang (or as she calls him "Twinkle Toes") used these weaknesses to his advantage and easily defeated her in battle using his Airbending skills in the ''Earth Rumble VI'' earthbending tournament. This vulnerability to air-based movements is also apparent at the end of the episode "]," when Toph is unaware of Sokka dropping a large belt on her head. An exception to this would be that, in multiple cases, she has been able to knock earth based objects out of the air or shatter them.
{{Empty section|date=April 2021}}


====''Toph Beifong's Metalbending Academy''====
As shown in the episodes "]" and "]," Toph has some difficulty with sand. Sand constantly shifts and is not a solid mass like rock, and she cannot accurately "feel" where she is going, describing the vibrations in the earth as "fuzzy." She is able to compress sand into solid earth, however, to gain some temporary footing.
Toph Beifong geta a Metalbending Academy.


===''The Legend of Korra''===
Toph's Earthbending skills seem to have many beneficial effects, many of which are physical. Through Earthbending she is able to take on superhuman toughness so she can dig her hands into soil or rock as easily as through water (demonstrated in "]") or even headbutt a large boulder into rubble.
]


====Book One: ''Air''====
Also as a result of her closeness or affinity with earth, Toph can rest or sleep comfortably on solid rock without any sleeping bag or blanket and can walk on any kind of terrain barefoot. Going shoeless seems to be standard for Earthbenders, though this is particularly important for Toph because she relies on contact with the ground for perception as well as in her Earthbending. In "]" she seems to have trouble feeling mud, as well as solid but non-earthen ice.
In ''The Legend of Korra'', Toph is revealed to have founded Republic City's police force and taught the art of metalbending to her students. Two of her students were her daughters ] and Suyin.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tveskimo.com/2014/07/27/avatar-legend-korra-old-wounds/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141104060449/http://www.tveskimo.com/2014/07/27/avatar-legend-korra-old-wounds/|url-status=usurped|archive-date=4 November 2014|title=The Legend of Korra&nbsp;— Old Wounds&nbsp;— TV Eskimo|publisher=TVEskimo|access-date=4 November 2014}}</ref> Her daughters mention in passing to Korra that they are actually half-sisters by two different fathers, but their identities were not revealed, and due to as-yet-unexplained reasons neither of Toph's daughters ever knew their fathers.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.latintimes.com/legend-korra-season-3-spoilers-see-lin-beifongs-sister-suyin-played-anne-heche-190700|title='Legend of Korra' Season 3 Spoilers|date=11 July 2014 |publisher=latintimes|access-date=4 November 2014}}</ref> Due to her own strict upbringing, Toph raised the pair as a single parent with essentially no restrictions. But it caused both of them to feel that she was ignoring them as their mutual need for her attention caused them to react in different ways: the older and strict Lin followed in her mother's footsteps as a Republic City police officer while the free-spirited Suyin became a delinquent by hanging with the wrong crowd, which Lin disapproved of. Eventually, Lin caught Suyin driving the getaway car for her criminal friends after a jewel theft, during which Suyin accidentally scarred the right side of Lin's face. Although upset with her daughters for putting her in a tough situation, Toph was forced to look the other way and tear up the police report because of the controversy it would cause before sending Suyin away to live with her grandparents; Lin did not take this kindly. This ignites a rift between Toph and her daughters. Toph, feeling guilt over her questionable actions, retired the following year with Lin eventually succeeding her as Republic City's Chief of Police by the time of the first season.


====Book Three: ''Change''====
It should also be noted that Toph has a great sense of hearing. She also has a distinct ability to recognize people by the sound of their voices (though this is common among blind people, even in real life). In "]" Toph recognized the Sandbender who stole Appa by his voice, stating that she "never forgets a voice". In "]" it is revealed that Toph can even feel slight vibrations as she tells a man they meet "I can feel you shaking." Another notable fact is that she can tell whether someone is lying or not by feeling their heart and breathing rate through the earth around them.
In the third-season episodes, "The Metal Clan" and "Old Wounds", it is revealed that Toph made her peace with a repentant Suyin and spent some years living with Suyin's family in Zaofu, a city of creative metalbenders founded by Suyin, which recognized Toph as the inventor of metalbending. A statue of her was built to honor her discovery. Some years prior to the events of the series, Toph left Zaofu to travel the world in search of enlightenment and had not been seen or heard from since.


====Book Four: ''Balance''====
Toph's Earthbending style is based on Chu Gar ]{{citation needed}}, which is a style that is apparently unique to her; the style of earthbending used by other Earthbenders is rooted in the ] style of Kung Fu. This may be because she is self-taught rather than trained in the "correct" Earthbending form. Toph shares her name with a particular kind of sandstone . It also is interesting to note that "Toph" is a ] word for "small drum" or "]," and may be an allusion to her ability to see by "feeling the beat" of vibrations from the earth . It is possible that her name could be a homonymic play on the word "TOFF", which is British slang for a member of the upper class. Accordingly, her name would accentuate Toph's rebellion to her refined & cosseted lifestyle with her elitist family through her chosen adventure & mannerisms. As seen by the customs/ferry-ticket woman's reaction to Toph's family seal in "]," the Bei Fong family's status (and/or wealth) is well-known and regarded in whatever ] aristocracy that exists. Or Toph may also simply be a play on the word "tough," to symbolize both her rigid attitude and one of the basic concepts of earthbending/earth itself.
Toph appears in the fourth-season episode "]", having made a home in the sacred spirit wilds of the Foggy Swamp where Aang's reincarnation, Korra, encounters her. In the episodes "The Coronation" and "The Calling", she assists Korra by removing the remnant liquid-metal poison placed in her body by the Red Lotus through helping her overcome her fears brought about by her past adversaries. Toph returns in the tenth episode, "Operation: Beifong", to aid Lin, her granddaughter Opal and Bolin, in freeing Suyin and her family from Kuvira's Earth Empire forces. She reveals that Lin's father was named Kanto, a nice man whose relationship with Toph didn't work out.<ref name="Operation Beifong">{{cite episode|title=Operation Beifong|airdate=5 December 2014|season=4|number=10|credits=Director: Melchior Zwyer; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino|series=The Legend of Korra|series-link=The Legend of Korra|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref>


===Graphic novels===
In the episode "]", Toph demonstrated an ability to sense a person's heartbeat and breathing pattern from the vibrations, and can recognize lies. Most likely, with this system, she can also determine the level of excitement or exhaustion that a person is in and to some extent predict future movements.
Eighty-five-year-old Toph returns in "]" upon being approached by Korra and Earth King Wu, requesting her assistance in stopping those who desired to further strengthen the Earth Empire's influence by becoming governor in the election, to which the elderly earthbending master and metalbending founder was not interested in.


=== Live action TV series ===
== Family ==
Toph will appear in second season of Netflix's live action series "]", portrayted by ].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://variety.com/2024/tv/news/avatar-the-last-airbender-toph-actress-live-action-1236151201/ |title=Netflix's 'Avatar: The Last Airbender' Season 2 Casts Miya Cech as Live-Action Toph |last=Otterson |first=Joe |date=September 19, 2024 |publisher=] |access-date=November 13, 2024}}</ref>
]
Toph's parents are very protective of their daughter. To avoid the risk of danger, they kept Toph at the beginner level of earthbending (while she is secretly more skilled than her teacher) for over six years. They always had guards keep close watch on her and kept the knowledge of her existence from the public. They viewed her condition as a disability in every sense of the word, assuming her to be weak and vulnerable to anything around her. Their ignorance of her true talents often upset her.


==Abilities==
After realizing that their daughter is a skilled Earthbender, their opinions are only strengthened, and to her dismay they decide that she needs guards around her constantly. When Toph subsequently flees her home unannounced to join Aang on his quest, her sudden absence leads her father to conclude wrongfully that she has been kidnapped by the Avatar. He hired ], her former teacher, and ], organizer of the bending tournaments, to bring her home by any means necessary.
===Heightened senses===
] ability to feel minute seismic vibrations through the ground, similar to ].]]
Being blind, Toph's ]s and other senses are hyper-sensitive. By grounding herself barefoot, Toph can "see" and "feel" even the most minute seismic vibrations in the earth, be it the presence of trees or the march of ants several meters away, an earthbending technique dubbed the "seismic sense". Toph has acquired an acute sense of hearing, enabling her to recognize people by their voices, discern a person's physical appearance by sound, overhear distant conversations,<ref name="The Desert">{{cite episode|title=The Desert|url=http://www.avatarspiritmedia.net/episode_guide.php?ep=211|airdate=14 June 2006|season=2|number=11|transcript=Avatar: The Last Airbender. Episode Transcript|transcript-url=http://www.avatarspiritmedia.net/transcripts.php?ep=211|credits=Director: Lauren MacMullan; Writer: Tim Hedrick|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|series-link=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> and sense falsehood via the individual's subtle breathing patterns, heartbeat, and physical reactions.<ref name="The Invasion">{{cite episode|title=The Day of Black Sun Part 1: The Invasion|url=http://www.avatarspiritmedia.net/episode_guide.php?ep=310|airdate=23 November 2007|season=3|number=10|transcript=Avatar: The Last Airbender. Episode Transcript|transcript-url=http://www.avatarspiritmedia.net/transcripts.php?ep=310|credits=Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|series-link=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> After taking residence in the Foggy Swamp, Toph claimed her heightened senses has expanded to the point of being fine-tuned via the spirit vines with events around the world.


Toph is disadvantaged against opponents who require minimal contact with the ground and vulnerable to any attacks initiated in mid-air.<ref name="The Blind Bandit" /> Terrain that impairs Toph's ability to sense vibrations also hinders her abilities; she has some difficulty with sand, which constantly lacks solidity, preventing her from accurately "feeling" her surroundings.<ref name="The Library">{{cite episode|title=The Library|airdate=14 June 2006|season=2|number=10|credits=Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: John O'Bryan|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|series-link=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> Because Toph relies on sensation in her feet to perform earthbending, she becomes truly "blind" if the soles of her feet are damaged, as shown when Zuko accidentally burns her feet. Although, she can feel the vibrations of the earth with her hands to some degree, they are not nearly as sensitive as her feet. Her affinity with the earth is further illustrated in that Toph does not know how to ] and expresses an aversion to flying.<ref name="The Serpent's Pass">{{cite episode|title=The Serpent's Pass|airdate=15 September 2006|season=2|number=12|credits=Director: Ethan Spaulding; Writers: Michael Dante DiMartino, Joshua Hamilton|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|series-link=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref>
== Relationships == <!--No Shipping!-->
=== Aang ===
] has a vision of Toph in the episode "]," but it is not until the episode "]," however, that the two actually meet. First encountering one another at the underground ''Earth Rumble VI'' Earthbending tournament, Toph considers ] a rival at first when he almost effortlessly defeats her through Airbending. At first, she is unwilling to talk to Aang and tries forcefully to keep him quiet when he talks to her parents at dinner about her Earthbending skills. After dinner, however, a truce is made, and Toph discusses with Aang her ability to listen to the earth and her life under her overbearing parents. Later, Toph single-handedly saves Aang when he is held captive by the participants of the earthbending tournament. She has since joined him on his quest after running away from home, but not before throwing him into a tree via Earthbending to even the score from the tournament.


===Earthbending===
In the episode "]," Toph begins to teach Aang Earthbending, but complications arise between Toph's teaching style and Aang's natural tendencies as an Airbender. Earthbending is, according to Toph, about directly taking on a challenge, not trying to find a way around or over it. The two also clash personality wise as Aang's pacifistic, carefree attitude is ill prepared to deal with the tough and stubborn Toph. She even goes as far as intentionally acting mean by taking Aang's staff and using it as a nutcracker to get a rise out of the passive Aang. Counterproductively, Aang's peaceful nature prevents him from acting, and depression comes as a result. Only after an insightful talk with Katara about earth being his natural opposite element, does Aang start thinking positively.
{{blockquote|"Earthbending is the element of substance. The key to Earthbending is your stance – you've gotta be steady and strong. Rock is a stubborn element. Unyielding. If you're going to move it, you've gotta be like a rock yourself."|Toph Beifong (''Avatar: The Last Airbender'')}}
Toph is highly skilled in earthbending which utilizes ] techniques of ] and ].<ref>The Lost Scrolls: Fire, page 159 of The Lost Scrolls Collection. The Lost Scrolls: Earth, page 93 of The Lost Scrolls Collection.</ref><ref> – Avatarspirit.net</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Ching|first=Gene|url=http://www.kungfumagazine.com/ezine/article.php?article=1038|title=Kisu on THE LEGEND OF KORRA|work=]|date=2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120415153727/http://www.kungfumagazine.com/ezine/article.php?article=1038|archive-date=15 April 2012}}</ref><ref name="avatar2/index.jhtml">{{cite web| url = http://www.nick.com/shows/avatar| title = Nickelodeon's Official Avatar: The Last Airbender Flash Site| access-date = 2 December 2006| publisher = Nick.com}}</ref><ref name="Return To Omashu">{{cite episode|title=Return to Omashu|airdate=7 April 2006|season=2|number=3|credits=Director: Ethan Spaulding; Writer: Elizabeth Welch Ehasz|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|series-link=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon|episode-link=Return to Omashu}}</ref> Earthbending represents the element of substance.<ref>Ehasz, Aaron (writer) & Spaulding, Ethan (director). (2 June 2006). "Bitter Work". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 9. Nickelodeon.</ref> It is categorized as the ''most diverse and enduring'' of the "four bending arts".<ref name="Avatar Earth">{{cite web | title=Inside the Nicktoons Studio: Avatar: "Earth" Episode Clip | url=http://spongebob.nick.com/videos/clip/nicktoon-studio-avatar-earth.html | publisher=Nickelodeon | access-date=21 October 2013 | archive-date=21 October 2013 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131021113936/http://spongebob.nick.com/videos/clip/nicktoon-studio-avatar-earth.html | url-status=dead}}</ref> Earthbending is the geokinetic ability to manipulate earth, rock, sand, lava, and metals in all their various forms. Earthbending utilizes '']'', which involves waiting and listening for the right moment to act decisively. Earthbending involves enduring attacks until the right opportunity to counterattack reveals itself, emphasizes "heavily rooted stances and strong blows that evoke the mass and power of earth", and demands precise ] to maintain constant contact with the ground. Earthbending parallels ] movements (such as the tiger's hard blows and the crane's affinity to landing gracefully). Earthbending is at its strongest when the feet or hand are in direct contact with the ground, enabling earthbenders to transfer their kinetic energies into their bending for fast and powerful moves. This reliance on direct contact with the earth is a figurative ]; separating earthbenders from any contact with the earth renders them ineffective.


====Neutral Jing====
Later, when forced to confront a ferocious ] in order to protect a trapped Sokka, Aang finally stands his ground and learns to think like an Earthbender. Toph is revealed to have been observing all the while, and after Aang proves his new toughness by taking back his staff and moving a boulder, Toph finally proclaims him an Earthbender.
The series' creators consulted a professional martial artist in the design of the show's fighting style.<ref name="Kisu">{{cite web | title=Kisu – Filmography by TV Series | url=https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0457467/filmoseries?ref_=nm_flmg_msc_1#tt0417299 |publisher=IMDb | access-date=21 October 2013}}</ref> The primary concepts in Earthbending (i.e. listening, reacting, balancing attacks and defense) and drawing power from a stable lower body are referred to in the practice of ''neutral jing''. The concept of ''neutral jing'' relates to the philosophy of "sticky hands". The purpose of sticky hands is to enable the practitioner to predict their opponent's next move. Similar to Toph detecting the movements of others through her connection with earth, a practitioner learns to detect their opponent's upcoming move by maintaining constant contact between their own arms, hands or wrists, and their foe's arm. By practicing with a partner in this manner, a practitioner learns to "read" the slight movements of their opponent's arms to detect their next attack and subsequently move accordingly to neutralize it.


====Metalbending====
Toph has adopted to referring to Aang as "Twinkle Toes." This is likely out of a kind of friendly humor, rather than insult. The nickname likely originates from Aang's hovering when they fought in "]." She commented then that he was "light on his feet" and asked if his tournament name was "The Fancy Dancer." In "]" she is able to find Aang in a large crowd because of his light foot steps.
Throughout ''Avatar: The Last Airbender'', Toph is the first earthbender known to bend metal. When Toph is imprisoned in iron, the ] Guru Pathik explains to Aang in a parallel scene that metal is refined earth; whereupon Toph locates the iron's impurities and manipulates them to "bend" the metal portion.<ref name="The Guru">{{cite episode|title=The Guru|airdate=1 December 2006|season=2|number=19|credits=Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writers: Michael Dante DiMartino, Bryan Konietzko|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|series-link=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> She practices and hones her initially unique skill throughout the rest of the series, later teaching it to other earthbenders prior to the events of the ''Legend of Korra''.


==Reception==
Aang and Toph's relationship is sometimes quite rocky. Toph's hardheaded nature clashes with Aang's on several occasions, particularly over the subject of ]. In the episode "]," a tired Toph, weary of going days without sleep, blames Appa's shedding as the reason they cannot shake their mysterious pursuers. Although she is right, Aang immediately jumps to Appa's defense, which results in Toph abandoning the group for a short time. Later, in the episode "]," after Appa is stolen by Sandbenders, Aang accuses Toph of allowing the thieves to steal him. Only ] is able to talk sense into him, advising that in lieu of not saving Appa, she did save the rest of the group. It seems like they get along a lot better now. Ever since they have been able to work together when they deal with threats, such as the Fire Nation and the Dai Li. In the episode the Earth King, he refers to everyone, including Toph, as his family.
]
Reviewer Michael Mammano loved that while Toph "never loses her rough edge, she's always been deftly humanized", feeling her relationships with her daughters would matter to her and thought it was "incredibly refreshing and feminist" that she had two children with different men because nowhere in the narrative was Toph "questioned or shamed for having children out of wedlock", adding: "She has been canonically confirmed as a woman who had a sex life that was on her terms." Mammano braced for her to die in ''The Legend of Korra'' episode "Operation: Beifong", though she survived and felt that as her final appearance in the series, "it was a great send-off, especially given her parting words."<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.denofgeek.us/tv/legend-of-korra/241886/the-legend-of-korra-operation-beifong-review|title=The Legend of Korra: Operation Beifong Review|date=5 December 2014|first=Michael|last=Mammano|publisher=Den of Geeks!}}</ref> Toph's character was viewed as being "ruined" due to her poor parenting in the eyes of her daughter Lin in ''The Legend of Korra''. Mammano objected to this by reasoning that the story is told from the perspective of her children while she was no longer around to defend herself, with and that grown children would never be able to fully understand their parents' rationale for raising them the way they did.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.denofgeek.us/tv/legend-of-korra/237459/the-legend-of-korra-old-wounds-review|title=The Legend of Korra: Old Wounds Review|date=8 July 2014|first=Michael|last=Mammano|publisher=Den of Geeks!}}</ref>


=== Katara === ==Family tree==
{{Beifong family tree}}
] has shown great sympathy for Toph over her restricted life under her parents. Like Aang and Sokka, Katara gladly welcomes Toph into their group. The two have been recently at odds with one another after Toph refused to help set up their campsite. Toph at one point referred insultingly to Katara as "Sugar Queen". However, at the end of the episode "]," they have reached better terms with each other. In the episode "]," Katara tries to help Toph by offering her wisdom on how to teach Aang Earthbending, although Toph naturally ignores the suggestion, since Earthbending requires a harder and tougher approach than Waterbending. At the very least, Toph seems to respect Katara as an equal, Bender to Bender.
]


==Notes==
In "]," Katara's the only one who sticks up for Toph when Aang blames her for not saving Appa.
{{Notelist}}


==References==
Later, in "]" Katara and Toph get makeovers together, and the usually self-confident Toph feels down about her looks. Katara manages to cheer her up, for which she is rewarded with a friendly (but hard) punch in the arm. The two of them definately respect each other and seem to be becoming good friends.
{{Reflist}}


==External links==
Toph will sometimes make references to her and Katara's differences in personality and lifestyle, giving her names such as 'Sugar Queen' and 'Sweetness.'
* at ]


=== Sokka ===
Because of Toph's young age and blindness, ] is skeptical of her Earthbending powers at first. Upon witnessing her skills, however, he is astonished to the point of fainting. Like Katara and Aang, Sokka gladly welcomes Toph into their group.

Just as Sokka was doubtful of Toph's fighting skills, Toph thinks little of Sokka's abilities as a warrior, dismissing his fighting skills because he cannot bend (consequently infuriating Sokka).

In the episode, "]," Sokka is the only member of the group who doesn't confront her for her apparent lack of responsibility.

In "]" Toph saves Sokka's life and expresses annoyance and possible jealousy when he worries about Suki rather than thanking her. Later in the same episode she is saved from drowning by Suki and, thinking Suki is Sokka, exclaims, "Oh, Sokka! You saved me!" and kisses her on the cheek. After finding out that her rescuer is Suki and not Sokka, she says, "You can let me drown now", very much embarrassed.

Toph enjoys teasing Sokka to annoy him; in "]" she praises his crude drawings of Appa, and for a moment he is pleased before sourly remembering that she cannot see them.

=== Iroh ===
Toph meets ] in an Earth Kingdom forest when she temporarily separates from Aang, Sokka and Katara in the episode "]." The two sit around a fire that Iroh uses to make tea and engage in conversation, although neither indicates his/her purpose for traveling or the identities of his/her relations. Iroh notes that Toph is a lot like ], because they both try to do too much by themselves. He also comments that there is nothing wrong with needing help, and sometimes people offer help because they want to, not because they believe the other person is incapable. Toph thanks him for the advice, and suggests that Iroh tell his nephew how much he means to him.

Toph and Iroh encounter each other again later in the episode when the two participate with Aang, Sokka, Katara and ] in cornering ] in an abandoned Earth Kingdom town. Iroh's attention is distracted off of Azula when he notices Toph's presence and her association with Aang, Sokka, and Katara. Taking advantage of his lack of focus on her, Azula wounds Iroh with a blast of fire before successfully fleeing. Toph shows particular concern for her new friend, but leaves him after Zuko violently demands that she and the others leave him and Iroh alone.

=== Appa ===
Because Toph can see only through Earthbending, she is completely blind when riding on Appa. This fact is emphasized in "]" when she claims to have spotted the library only to remind her friends that she is blind. Because of this, Toph is often very bored and restless when riding on Appa.

Toph expresses some dislike towards Appa in "]" when she angrily points out that Appa's ridiculous amount of shedding left a large trail that allowed the Fire Nation to find them no matter how far or fast they flew.

In "]" Toph tries her best to protect Appa from being stolen by Sandbenders. She could not fight her hardest, as she also had to keep Aang, Katara and Sokka's only exit from an ancient library from falling into the sand, trapping them for eternity. She also had to deal with the fact that she couldn't "see" as well when on sand (as explained in this article as well). This causes her to fail in protecting Appa, and her sadness afterwards shows that she does care for Appa as a friend.

Though she cares for Appa like the rest of the group, she admitted that she hates flying.

== Trivia ==
* Toph is the first and, so far, only Bender to have a different root martial art than what is associated with a particular bending element.
* Toph is so far the only one in the show to have a last name (Bei Fong). The only other instance of one in the show was Aang's made-up surname "Pipinpadlopsakopolous" during the group's first visit to Omashu. Historically, in ] cultures family names were reserved for members of nobility before common people started adopting family names for themselves.
* The Bei Fong family seems to be quite affluent due to the special treatment Toph was given when she requested four tickets in the episode "The Serpent's Pass."
* In the episode "]," Toph reveals that she can't swim. Earlier in the episode when Aang's group is playing in the river, Toph is seen simply splashing in the water with her feet only. This makes logical sense, because Toph is used to "seeing" things through direct contact with solid ground.
* In the episode "]," Toph seemed to know that Iroh (The Dragon of the West) actually got into the city of Ba Sing Se during his 600-day seige. This suggests that Toph was well educated, even though her blindness prevents her from enjoying books (As mentioned in "The Library"). Interestingly, she made friends with Iroh during "],".
* With her method of 'seeing', it is hard for her to see specific features. In "]" when Katara tells her she's pretty, Toph replies - "I'd return the compliment, but... I have no idea what you look like."
* Coming from an affluent family, Toph is trained in etiquette. However she prefers to live freely as seen in her unlady-like behavior, although she can behave more ladylike as shown in the episode "]."
*In "]," the names Katara and Toph used at the party were Kuā Měi (姱 美) for Katara and Dòng (侗) for Toph. Toph was not happy with hers because while Kuā Měi translates as 'fascinating beautiful,' Dòng means 'ignorant' or 'rustic.'
* In the episode "]," Toph reveals that she does not like anyone to touch her feet. She also reveals that she is self-conscious about her appearance.
*In "The Serpent Pass," Toph's passport reads as 土國頭等護照北方拓芙 (tǔ guó tóu děng hù zhào běi fāng tuò fú) which translate as 'Earth Kingdom Head Class passport of Bei Fong Toph.' Here, her name means 'supported lotus,' which matches her parents view of their daughter as a flower that has to be protected. In "Tales of Ba Sing Se," her name was changed to 托 夫 (Tuō Fū), which means "entrusted husband." Her name is reverted back to 拓芙 in "The Earth King." Bei Fong ( 北 方 ), her last name, means "North". The word 托 (Tuō) also means "to support in one's palm" and is usually a prefix to another Fù ( 付 ) that means "hand over."

== References ==
<references/>
{{Avatar}} {{Avatar}}
{{portal bar|Animation|Television}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Beifong, Toph}}
]
]
] ]
] ]
]
]
]
] ]
] ]
] ]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]


]
]

Latest revision as of 02:33, 5 January 2025

Fictional character in Avatar: The Last Airbender
This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Misplaced Pages's quality standards. You can help. The talk page may contain suggestions. (October 2021)

Fictional character
Toph Beifong
Avatar: The Last Airbender/The Legend of Korra character
Toph Beifong in Avatar: The Last Airbender.
First appearance
Last appearance
Created by
Voice by
Portrayed by
In-universe information
GenderFemale
ChildrenLin Beifong (older daughter)
Suyin Beifong (younger daughter)
NationalityEarth Kingdom
Bending element
  • Earthbending
  • metalbending
Age12 in Avatar: The Last Airbender
13–14 in Avatar comics
82 in The Legend of Korra and its comics

Toph Beifong (Chinese: 北方拓芙; pinyin: Běifāng Tuòfú) is a fictional character in Nickelodeon's animated television series Avatar: The Last Airbender and The Legend of Korra, voiced by Michaela Jill Murphy in the original series and Kate Higgins as an adult and Philece Sampler as an elder in the sequel series. She will be portrayed by Miya Cech in Season 2 of the live-action television series adaptation.

Toph is recognized as a prodigy of earthbending, which is the ability to telekinetically manipulate, reshape and control stone, sand, dirt, and, later, metal. Because she was born blind, and her parents believed that her condition limited her capacity to learn and use the skill safely, they had a tutor teach her only basic earthbending. She later learned more advanced earthbending secretly from the badgermoles (fictional blind creatures that naturally earthbend). She eventually becomes the first person to develop the ability to "bend" metal as well. Toph has been blind since birth, but from her observations of badgermoles, she had learned to locate objects and their movements by sensing their vibrations in the earth around her.

Toph was introduced in the second season of Avatar. She travels with the protagonist Aang as his earthbending teacher, shown to have an abrasive, conceited and sometimes stubborn personality which leads to clashes with her peers. Toph proves herself a steadfast ally to Avatar Aang and eventually Avatar Korra. As a breakout character, the character has received universal acclaim, quickly becoming a fan favorite.

Character overview

Creation and conception

Toph was initially conceived as a sixteen-year-old boy that was athletic and muscular, designed to be a foil to Sokka. Her prototype design is featured in the show's intro as the earthbender. As the series progressed and the time came closer to introduce an earthbender who would join the main characters, head writer Aaron Ehasz suggested that they create contrast by designing a little girl who is able to defeat strong, adult earthbenders; some of the staff found this humorous, but it was initially rejected by Avatar co-creator Bryan Konietzko. Following several long discussions, Konietzko stopped fighting the idea and warmed up to it, after which Toph was made female and introduced into the series, becoming one of Konietzko's favorite characters. The character's original design was recycled into the appearances of minor characters The Boulder and Sud. Her original design greatly influenced the appearance of Bolin in The Legend of Korra. Her Earth Rumble outfit, the clothing she wears for the majority of Avatar: The Last Airbender, was inspired by European fashion styles. Her fancy dress was modeled after the traditional clothing of the Chinese Tang dynasty.

Toph uses a unique fighting style of earthbending, based on the Southern Praying Mantis style.

Toph was favored by the creators to return in The Legend of Korra after the appearances of both Katara and Zuko, DiMartino writing that it "never quite made sense" for there to be a trip to the swamp, where she was located, during the third season. In the following season, she was meant to serve as a foil to Korra with her "gruff mentoring style" contrasting the reserved Korra. Her design became a subject of difficulty for the staff, who wanted her to return to the size of her twelve-year-old self from the original series despite flashbacks in the earlier part of The Legend of Korra showing her as having grown in height. Konietzko was content with the staff's wishes but wanted her shortened height to come from her having become hunched since then. Artists had issues carrying out this design, resulting in multiple takes.

Personality and characteristics

Toph is fiercely independent, direct, belligerent, and practiced in taunting and insulting her opponents and on occasion her friends, particularly Sokka. On several occasions Toph appears picking her nose, spitting, and belching loudly. As she explained to Aang and his companions, she does this intentionally as a rebellion against the principles of refined culture that her aristocratic parents attempted to make her conform to. If the situation absolutely requires it, she actually knows how to behave in upper-class Earth Kingdom culture much better than Aang's companions do. She is usually covered in dirt, or as she calls it, "a healthy coating of earth".

In her advanced age, despite retaining much of her strength as an earthbender, Toph refuses to take part in prolonged conflicts, admitting that she is too old and lacks the energy for such endeavors.

Name

This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Toph Beifong" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (June 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

In "The Serpent's Pass", Toph's passport reads 土國頭等護照北方拓芙 (tǔ guó tóu děng hù zhào běi fāng tuò fú), which translates as "Earth Kingdom First Class Passport: Beifong Toph". Here, her name means "supported lotus", which matches her parents' view of their daughter as a flower in need of protection. In "Tales of Ba Sing Se", her name is written as 托夫 (Tuō Fū), which is the phonetic transcription based on the official guide for foreign names. In "The Earth King", her name is reverted to 拓芙. Her last name Beifong (北方) is close to the Mandarin pronunciation of the word "North" (běi fāng). The word 托 (Tuō) also means "to support in one's palm", or "drag" and is the word used for child care, and is also intended to sound like the English word "tough" and "toff".

Appearances

Avatar: The Last Airbender television series

Michaela Jill Murphy voices the young Toph in Avatar: The Last Airbender.

Book Two: Earth

Toph's parents view her blindness as a disability and therefore keep her concealed. Despite her handicap, Toph has developed special skills by keeping company with the blind 'badgermoles' that inhabited nearby caves. By imitating their movements, Toph became a master of the martial art known as 'earthbending', but she kept her ability secret from her overprotective family. Toph fought frequently in Earth Rumble, an earthbending lei tai tournament resembling professional wrestling, under the alias "Blind Bandit". By the time Aang and his friends discover Toph at the tournament, she had become champion, holding a 42–0 win–loss record. However, Aang unintentionally beats her in a match when he tries to talk to her, as she could not sense air currents. When her parents learn about this and confine her further, Toph runs away to accompany Aang and his friends as Aang's earthbending instructor, although her parents believe she was kidnapped by Aang. Toph nearly leaves the group after feuding with Katara over not contributing to the group's teamwork, though rejoins them following a meeting with Iroh and encountering Princess Azula for the first time. Toph successfully begins Aang's training of earthbending and slows the descent of Wan Shi Tong's Library, where the group learns the date of the next Day of Black Sun and inadvertently gains an advantage over the Fire Nation, as it sinks, though fails to prevent Appa from being kidnapped by sandbenders. Due to Appa being the group's transportation, they are forced to travel on foot, journeying through Serpent's Pass and preventing a drill from entering Ba Sing Se. Now in the city, she infiltrates the Earth Kingdom Royal Palace, meeting Dai Li, bonds with Katara, encounters Jet and reunites with Appa. Toph also learns to metalbend after she is captured in a metal cage by people who were sent by her parents to retrieve her. She realizes that metal contains small amounts of earth, which she can manipulate. She quickly escapes and traps her captors in the same small cage.

Book Three: Fire

After the events of the Book 2 finale, Toph, alongside Sokka, Katara and the Southern Water Tribe, captured a Fire Nation ship. Once in the Fire Nation, she assumed the identity of a regular Fire Nation girl. In "The Runaway", Toph uses her earthbending senses to foil a vendor's trick, and by bargaining and continuing to use her senses, she extracts more and more money from him. Katara is distressed by this, and scolds Toph for her immoral behavior, but later enlists her to pull a huge scam. Katara fakes turning Toph over to the police in order to collect the reward money, with the assumption that Toph will metalbend her way out of prison and rejoin her. However, it is revealed that there is no reward money and the cells are made of wood, and Katara is shoved in jail alongside Toph. Aang and Sokka attempt to overtake their adversary Combustion Man, but Katara ends up busting herself and Toph out by being resourceful in her attempt to draw water for her bending. Toph then is part of the invasion team, and she helps Aang get to Firelord Ozai's underground bunker. She later is seen riding on Appa after the invasion team's defeat.

In "The Western Air Temple", she arrives at the Western Air Temple with the Gaang and meets Zuko. She is accepting of him at first, urging Katara and Sokka to accept his help, but after she is burned by him, she too grows angry with him. When he reattempts to join their team, she happily accepts him on the grounds of Aang's acceptance. In the finale, Toph helps Sokka and Suki attack a Fire Nation airship. Suki hops off the ship in order to help Toph and Sokka get to safety. Toph is nearly knocked off the burning ship and killed, but Sokka rescues her and they are promptly retrieved by Suki. She later celebrates the Fire Lord's defeat with her friends in Iroh's tea shop.

Avatar: The Last Airbender comic series

The Promise

In The Promise trilogy, Toph is revealed to have established the Beifong Metalbending Academy, an instructional institution to help earthbenders learn metalbending, shortly after the end of the television series. She chooses her three students (Penga, The Dark One and Ho Tun) on the basis of her meteorite bracelet shivering in their presence. Though claiming her motives behind founding the school were due to her love of metalbending, in actuality, she enjoys bossing people around. Initially worried her students are not capable of being metalbenders, they surprise her with their victory over Kunyo and his firebending students, renewing her confidence in them and she participates in the battle for Yu Dao.

The Rift

In The Rift trilogy, Toph encounters her father for the first time since the series, though he refuses to acknowledge her as his daughter. It is further revealed that her parents broke up after the people they sent to bring Toph back had failed. Toph prevents the others from being killed by debris falling from the mine collapsing, including her father, who reconciles with her as she saves everyone. Following this, she passes out and has her students assist Aang in his battle against the spirit of Old Iron.

Smoke and Shadow

This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (April 2021)

North and South

This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (April 2021)

Imbalance

This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (April 2021)

Toph Beifong's Metalbending Academy

Toph Beifong geta a Metalbending Academy.

The Legend of Korra

Korra encounters 82-year-old Toph living in the swamp.

Book One: Air

In The Legend of Korra, Toph is revealed to have founded Republic City's police force and taught the art of metalbending to her students. Two of her students were her daughters Lin and Suyin. Her daughters mention in passing to Korra that they are actually half-sisters by two different fathers, but their identities were not revealed, and due to as-yet-unexplained reasons neither of Toph's daughters ever knew their fathers. Due to her own strict upbringing, Toph raised the pair as a single parent with essentially no restrictions. But it caused both of them to feel that she was ignoring them as their mutual need for her attention caused them to react in different ways: the older and strict Lin followed in her mother's footsteps as a Republic City police officer while the free-spirited Suyin became a delinquent by hanging with the wrong crowd, which Lin disapproved of. Eventually, Lin caught Suyin driving the getaway car for her criminal friends after a jewel theft, during which Suyin accidentally scarred the right side of Lin's face. Although upset with her daughters for putting her in a tough situation, Toph was forced to look the other way and tear up the police report because of the controversy it would cause before sending Suyin away to live with her grandparents; Lin did not take this kindly. This ignites a rift between Toph and her daughters. Toph, feeling guilt over her questionable actions, retired the following year with Lin eventually succeeding her as Republic City's Chief of Police by the time of the first season.

Book Three: Change

In the third-season episodes, "The Metal Clan" and "Old Wounds", it is revealed that Toph made her peace with a repentant Suyin and spent some years living with Suyin's family in Zaofu, a city of creative metalbenders founded by Suyin, which recognized Toph as the inventor of metalbending. A statue of her was built to honor her discovery. Some years prior to the events of the series, Toph left Zaofu to travel the world in search of enlightenment and had not been seen or heard from since.

Book Four: Balance

Toph appears in the fourth-season episode "Korra Alone", having made a home in the sacred spirit wilds of the Foggy Swamp where Aang's reincarnation, Korra, encounters her. In the episodes "The Coronation" and "The Calling", she assists Korra by removing the remnant liquid-metal poison placed in her body by the Red Lotus through helping her overcome her fears brought about by her past adversaries. Toph returns in the tenth episode, "Operation: Beifong", to aid Lin, her granddaughter Opal and Bolin, in freeing Suyin and her family from Kuvira's Earth Empire forces. She reveals that Lin's father was named Kanto, a nice man whose relationship with Toph didn't work out.

Graphic novels

Eighty-five-year-old Toph returns in "Ruins of the Empire, Part 2" upon being approached by Korra and Earth King Wu, requesting her assistance in stopping those who desired to further strengthen the Earth Empire's influence by becoming governor in the election, to which the elderly earthbending master and metalbending founder was not interested in.

Live action TV series

Toph will appear in second season of Netflix's live action series "Avatar: The Last Airbender", portrayted by Miya Cech.

Abilities

Heightened senses

An illustration of Toph's mechanoreceptor ability to feel minute seismic vibrations through the ground, similar to sonar.

Being blind, Toph's mechanoreceptors and other senses are hyper-sensitive. By grounding herself barefoot, Toph can "see" and "feel" even the most minute seismic vibrations in the earth, be it the presence of trees or the march of ants several meters away, an earthbending technique dubbed the "seismic sense". Toph has acquired an acute sense of hearing, enabling her to recognize people by their voices, discern a person's physical appearance by sound, overhear distant conversations, and sense falsehood via the individual's subtle breathing patterns, heartbeat, and physical reactions. After taking residence in the Foggy Swamp, Toph claimed her heightened senses has expanded to the point of being fine-tuned via the spirit vines with events around the world.

Toph is disadvantaged against opponents who require minimal contact with the ground and vulnerable to any attacks initiated in mid-air. Terrain that impairs Toph's ability to sense vibrations also hinders her abilities; she has some difficulty with sand, which constantly lacks solidity, preventing her from accurately "feeling" her surroundings. Because Toph relies on sensation in her feet to perform earthbending, she becomes truly "blind" if the soles of her feet are damaged, as shown when Zuko accidentally burns her feet. Although, she can feel the vibrations of the earth with her hands to some degree, they are not nearly as sensitive as her feet. Her affinity with the earth is further illustrated in that Toph does not know how to swim and expresses an aversion to flying.

Earthbending

"Earthbending is the element of substance. The key to Earthbending is your stance – you've gotta be steady and strong. Rock is a stubborn element. Unyielding. If you're going to move it, you've gotta be like a rock yourself."

— Toph Beifong (Avatar: The Last Airbender)

Toph is highly skilled in earthbending which utilizes Chinese martial arts techniques of Hóng Quán and Chu Gar Nán Pài Tángláng. Earthbending represents the element of substance. It is categorized as the most diverse and enduring of the "four bending arts". Earthbending is the geokinetic ability to manipulate earth, rock, sand, lava, and metals in all their various forms. Earthbending utilizes neutral jing, which involves waiting and listening for the right moment to act decisively. Earthbending involves enduring attacks until the right opportunity to counterattack reveals itself, emphasizes "heavily rooted stances and strong blows that evoke the mass and power of earth", and demands precise stepping footwork to maintain constant contact with the ground. Earthbending parallels Five Animals movements (such as the tiger's hard blows and the crane's affinity to landing gracefully). Earthbending is at its strongest when the feet or hand are in direct contact with the ground, enabling earthbenders to transfer their kinetic energies into their bending for fast and powerful moves. This reliance on direct contact with the earth is a figurative Achilles' heel; separating earthbenders from any contact with the earth renders them ineffective.

Neutral Jing

The series' creators consulted a professional martial artist in the design of the show's fighting style. The primary concepts in Earthbending (i.e. listening, reacting, balancing attacks and defense) and drawing power from a stable lower body are referred to in the practice of neutral jing. The concept of neutral jing relates to the philosophy of "sticky hands". The purpose of sticky hands is to enable the practitioner to predict their opponent's next move. Similar to Toph detecting the movements of others through her connection with earth, a practitioner learns to detect their opponent's upcoming move by maintaining constant contact between their own arms, hands or wrists, and their foe's arm. By practicing with a partner in this manner, a practitioner learns to "read" the slight movements of their opponent's arms to detect their next attack and subsequently move accordingly to neutralize it.

Metalbending

Throughout Avatar: The Last Airbender, Toph is the first earthbender known to bend metal. When Toph is imprisoned in iron, the sadhu Guru Pathik explains to Aang in a parallel scene that metal is refined earth; whereupon Toph locates the iron's impurities and manipulates them to "bend" the metal portion. She practices and hones her initially unique skill throughout the rest of the series, later teaching it to other earthbenders prior to the events of the Legend of Korra.

Reception

Cosplay of Toph

Reviewer Michael Mammano loved that while Toph "never loses her rough edge, she's always been deftly humanized", feeling her relationships with her daughters would matter to her and thought it was "incredibly refreshing and feminist" that she had two children with different men because nowhere in the narrative was Toph "questioned or shamed for having children out of wedlock", adding: "She has been canonically confirmed as a woman who had a sex life that was on her terms." Mammano braced for her to die in The Legend of Korra episode "Operation: Beifong", though she survived and felt that as her final appearance in the series, "it was a great send-off, especially given her parting words." Toph's character was viewed as being "ruined" due to her poor parenting in the eyes of her daughter Lin in The Legend of Korra. Mammano objected to this by reasoning that the story is told from the perspective of her children while she was no longer around to defend herself, with and that grown children would never be able to fully understand their parents' rationale for raising them the way they did.

Family tree

Beifong family tree
Lao BeifongPoppy Beifong
KantoToph BeifongSuyin's father
Kuvira's FatherKuvira's MotherLin BeifongSuyin BeifongBaatar Sr.
General KuviraBaatar Jr.HuanOpalWeiWing
Notes:
  1. ^ In Ruins of the Empire (2019–2020), Kuvira is shown to have been adopted as a child by Suyin Beifong, after being abandoned by her birth parents.

Notes

  1. Prior to her first full appearance in "The Blind Bandit", Toph appears to Aang in a vision in "The Swamp".

References

  1. Graves, Sabina (11 April 2024). "Aang: The Last Airbender Movie Has Found Its Cast, Including Dave Bautista". Gizmodo. Retrieved 11 April 2024.
  2. Roth, Rachel (26 August 2020). "The Legend of Korra: Just How Old Is Avatar's Toph in the Sequel Series?". CBR.com. Retrieved 29 April 2024.
  3. Andreeva, Nellie (19 September 2024). "'Avatar: The Last Airbender' Finds Its Toph: Miya Cech Cast In Season 2 Of Netflix Series". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 22 September 2024.
  4. Khan, Aina (1 September 2020). "'I've seen grown men cry' – why Avatar: The Last Airbender still touches millions". The Guardian.
  5. Avatar Extras for episode "The Blind Bandit".
  6. Liu, Ed (22 April 2008). "Toon Zone News Interviews Bryan Konietzko and Mike DiMartino on "Avatar"". toonzone.net.
  7. DVD commentary for "The Blind Bandit"
  8. ^ Konietzko, Bryan; DiMartino, Michael Dante (2010). Avatar, The Last Airbender: The Art of the Animated Series. Dark Horse. p. 97. ISBN 978-1-62115-798-4.
  9. DiMartino, Michae Dante; Konietzko, Bryan (2015). The Legend of Korra: The Art of the Animated Series Book Four: Balance. Dark Horse Books. p. 40. ISBN 978-1616556877.
  10. ^ Director: Ethan Spaulding; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino (5 May 2006). "The Blind Bandit". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 6. Nickelodeon. Avatar: The Last Airbender. Episode Transcript.
  11. "The Chase". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2 (Book 2). Episode 8. 26 May 2006. Nickelodeon.
  12. "8 Quotes by Toph Bei Fong". lessreal. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  13. "Official Google translation of 托".
  14. Van Hoey, Thomas (2016). The Blending of Bending: World-building in Avatar: The Last Airbender and Legend of Korra. p. 11.
  15. "Avatar: Why Toph Was A Guy In The Ember Island Players". screen Rant. 24 September 2020. Retrieved 24 September 2020.
  16. "Synopsis of Avatar: The Last Airbender Episodes, "The Firebending Masters", Episode 13, Season 3". Nickelodeon. Retrieved 15 July 2008.
  17. Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino, Bryan Konietzko (26 May 2006). "The Chase". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 8. Nickelodeon.
  18. Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino, Bryan Konietzko (14 July 2006). "The Library". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 10. Nickelodeon.
  19. Hedrick, Tim (writer) & MacMullan, Lauren (director). (22 September 2006). "City of Walls and Secrets". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 14. Nickelodeon.
  20. Estoesta, Joann, Wahlander, Lisa, Huebner, Andrew, Scheppke, Gary, MacMullan, Lauren, Mattila, Katie, Ridge, Justin, Volpe, Giancarlo (writers) & Spaulding, Ethan (director). (29 September 2006). "The Tales of Ba Sing Se". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 15. Nickelodeon.
  21. Hedrick, Tim (writer) & MacMullan, Lauren (director). (6 November 2006). "Lake Laogai". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 17. Nickelodeon.
  22. Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Promise, Part 1
  23. Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Promise, Part 2
  24. Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Promise, Part 3
  25. Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Rift, Part 1
  26. Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Rift, Part 2
  27. Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Rift, Part 3
  28. "The Legend of Korra — Old Wounds — TV Eskimo". TVEskimo. Archived from the original on 4 November 2014. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  29. "'Legend of Korra' Season 3 Spoilers". latintimes. 11 July 2014. Retrieved 4 November 2014.
  30. Director: Melchior Zwyer; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino (5 December 2014). "Operation Beifong". The Legend of Korra. Season 4. Episode 10. Nickelodeon.
  31. Otterson, Joe (19 September 2024). "Netflix's 'Avatar: The Last Airbender' Season 2 Casts Miya Cech as Live-Action Toph". Variety. Retrieved 13 November 2024.
  32. Director: Lauren MacMullan; Writer: Tim Hedrick (14 June 2006). "The Desert". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 11. Nickelodeon. Avatar: The Last Airbender. Episode Transcript.
  33. Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino (23 November 2007). "The Day of Black Sun Part 1: The Invasion". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 3. Episode 10. Nickelodeon. Avatar: The Last Airbender. Episode Transcript.
  34. Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: John O'Bryan (14 June 2006). "The Library". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 10. Nickelodeon.
  35. Director: Ethan Spaulding; Writers: Michael Dante DiMartino, Joshua Hamilton (15 September 2006). "The Serpent's Pass". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 12. Nickelodeon.
  36. The Lost Scrolls: Fire, page 159 of The Lost Scrolls Collection. The Lost Scrolls: Earth, page 93 of The Lost Scrolls Collection.
  37. San Diego Comicon 2006 panel question and answer part 2 – Avatarspirit.net
  38. Ching, Gene (2012). "Kisu on THE LEGEND OF KORRA". Kung Fu Magazine. Archived from the original on 15 April 2012.
  39. "Nickelodeon's Official Avatar: The Last Airbender Flash Site". Nick.com. Retrieved 2 December 2006.
  40. Director: Ethan Spaulding; Writer: Elizabeth Welch Ehasz (7 April 2006). "Return to Omashu". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 3. Nickelodeon.
  41. Ehasz, Aaron (writer) & Spaulding, Ethan (director). (2 June 2006). "Bitter Work". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 9. Nickelodeon.
  42. "Inside the Nicktoons Studio: Avatar: "Earth" Episode Clip". Nickelodeon. Archived from the original on 21 October 2013. Retrieved 21 October 2013.
  43. "Kisu – Filmography by TV Series". IMDb. Retrieved 21 October 2013.
  44. Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writers: Michael Dante DiMartino, Bryan Konietzko (1 December 2006). "The Guru". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 19. Nickelodeon.
  45. Mammano, Michael (5 December 2014). "The Legend of Korra: Operation Beifong Review". Den of Geeks!.
  46. Mammano, Michael (8 July 2014). "The Legend of Korra: Old Wounds Review". Den of Geeks!.

External links

Avatar: The Last Airbender
The Last Airbender
(The Legend of Aang)
Episodes
Animated films
Comics
Characters
Video games
Other
Live-action
adaptations
The Legend of Korra
Episodes
Comics
Characters
Video games
Chronicles of the Avatar
Related articles
Portals: Categories: