Toph Beifong

"Toph" redirects here. For TopH, the homotopy category of topological spaces, see Homotopy category.
Toph Beifong
Avatar: The Last Airbender/The Legend of Korra character
First appearance "The Swamp"
(Aang's vision)

"The Blind Bandit"
(actual appearance)
Voiced by Jessie Flower (child)
Kate Higgins (adult)
Philece Sampler (senior)
Information
Aliases The Blind Bandit
The Runaway
Chief
Species Human
Gender Female
Relatives Lao Beifong (father)
Poppy Beifong (mother)
Lin Beifong (daughter)
Suyin Beifong (daughter)
Bataar (son-in-law)
Bataar Jr. (grandson)
Huan (grandson)
Opal (granddaughter)
Wei and Wing (grandsons)
Nationality Earth Kingdom
Age 12 (Avatar: The Last Airbender)
14 (The Promise & The Rift)
86 (The Legend of Korra)
Bending Element Earth
Metal
Sand
Hair color Black with Hairbun
Eye color Sea foam green
(blind)
Position Protagonist

Toph Beifong (北方拓芙) is a fictional character in Nickelodeon's animated television series Avatar: The Last Airbender and The Legend of Korra, voiced by Jessie Flower in the original series and Kate Higgins and Philece Sampler in the sequel series.

Toph is commonly identified as an extremely talented and masterful earthbender. She has the elemental ability to geokinetically/terrakinetically manipulate, reshape and control the solid earth and ground. In the show she is the only child of the wealthy Beifong family, whose symbol is a winged boar. As the show progresses she learns metalbending and sandbending as well. Toph is blind since birth and has extensive earthbending skills, which allow her to sense movements around her using vibrations (mechanoreceptor). She travels along with Aang and his friends as his earthbending teacher.

Name

Toph is the only character of the series to express a last name, "Beifong". 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" and is the word used for child care.[1]

Character

Personality

Avatar: The Last Airbender

Jessie Flower voices the young Toph in Avatar: The Last Airbender.

Toph's parents view her blindness as a disability and therefore keep her concealed.[2] Despite her handicap, Toph developed special skills by keeping company with the blind 'Badgermoles' that inhabited nearby caves.[3] By imitating their movements, Toph became a master of the martial art known as 'Earthbending'; but kept her ability secret from her 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.[2] When her parents learn about this and confine her further, Toph accompanies Aang and his friends as Aang's earthbending instructor.

Toph is fiercely independent, direct, belligerent, and practiced in taunting and insulting her opponents[2] and on occasion her friends, particularly Sokka.[4] 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".[5]

The Legend of Korra

Korra encounters 86 year old Toph living in the swamp.

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.[6] 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.[7] 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 following in her mother's footsteps as a Republic City police officer while the free-spirited Suyin rebelled against Toph by hanging with the wrong crowd. 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. Toph was forced to look the other way and tear up the police report because of controversy it would cause before sending Suyin away to live with her grandparents. 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.

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. Some years prior to the events of the series Toph left Zaofu and to travel the world in search of enlightenment and had not been seen or heard from since.

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 found her. in the episodes "The Coronation" and "The Calling", 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 with whom things don't work.[8]

Abilities

Seismic sense

As she was born blind, Toph uses this rare useful psionic ability to sense vibrations in the earth and ground with her feet, which allows her to "see" clearly in many ways. She can detect whether a person is lying by feeling their physical reactions; such as the most subtle of their breathing patterns and heartbeat, and sense incoming threats. Eventually, her seismic sensing abilities become strong enough to detect what is going on in the world via the spirit vines in the mystical Foggy Swamp.

Earthbending

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

Toph has unique abilities of earthbending. While the Earthbending style used by most Earthbenders is rooted in the Hung Gar style of Kung Fu, Toph's style is based on Chu Gar Southern Praying Mantis Kung Fu.[9] Being blind, Toph's mechanoreceptors are hyper-sensitive, allowing the ability to "feel" even the most minute seismic vibrations in the earth, be it the presence of trees and buildings or the march of ants several meters away. This sense provides a distinct advantage when facing other Earthbenders in combat, who require contact with the ground in any fight.[2] As another result of her blindness, Toph has acquired an acute sense of hearing, enabling her to recognize people by their voices, discern a person's physical appearance by sound, and overhear distant conversations.[10] Toph also has the ability to sense falsehood by feeling the individual's heartbeat, although this can be outdone by the highly trained, or the criminally insane.[11] After taking residence in the Foggy Swamp, Toph claimed her sixth sense has expanded to point of being fine tuned with events around the world. However, despite still retaining much of her strength as an Earthbender even in her advanced age, Toph refuses to take part in prolonged conflicts, admitting that she is too old and lacks the energy for such endeavors. She was, however, roused into action against Kuvira, the main antagonist of Book Four: Balance, when she poised a direct threat to her family.

Because she depends on vibrations in the earth, Toph is vulnerable to attacks initiated in mid-air or opponents who require less contact with the ground.[2] 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.[12] 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. As further illustrations of her affinity with the earth, Toph does not know how to swim and expresses an aversion to flying.[13]

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.[14] 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. However, while revealing Korra to still have traces of a metal-based poison in her body, Toph explained her daughters did not fully master her metal bending styles well enough to sense even small traces of metal inside one's body.

Sandbending

Toph also becomes proficient in sandbending, a more common earthbending technique, to the point where she can swiftly produce a detailed sand sculpture of Ba Sing Se. At the beginning she finds it hard to bend sand as it's loose and light. In the second season, it's revealed that she is unable to navigate effectively on sand as it makes everything look fuzzy and blurry to her.[12] But after practicing, she eventually achieves mastery over it.[15]

Reception

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 finale appearance in the series, "it was a great send-off, especially given her parting words."[16] Toph's character was viewed as being "ruined" due to her poor parenting in the eyes of her daughter Lin, along with that of Aang, whose children Bumi and Kya made similar claims of him in The Legend of Korra. Mammano refuted this by reasoning that she was no longer around to defend herself, with the story being told from the perspective of her children and that grown children would never be able to fully understand the rationale of their parents for raising them the way they did.[17]

References

  1. "Official Google translation of 托".
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Director: Ethan Spaulding; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino (2006-05-05). "The Blind Bandit". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 6http://www.avatarspiritmedia.net/transcripts.php?ep=206 |transcripturl= missing title (help). Nickelodeon.
  3. "Synopsis of Avatar: The Last Airbender Episodes, "The Firebending Masters", Episode 13, Season 3,". Nickelodeon. Retrieved 2008-07-15.
  4. "The Chase". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2 (Book 2). Episode 8. 2006-05-26. Nickelodeon.
  5. "8 Quotes by Toph Bei Fong". lessreal. Retrieved November 4, 2014.
  6. "Avatar: The Legend of Korra — Old Wounds — TV Eskimo". TVEskimo. Retrieved November 4, 2014.
  7. "'Legend of Korra' Season 3 Spoilers". latintimes. Retrieved November 4, 2014.
  8. Director:Melchior Zwyer; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino (2014-12-05). "Operation Beifong". The Legend of Korra. Season 4. Episode 10. Nickelodeon.
  9. San Diego Comicon 2006 panel question and answer part 2 - Avatarspirit.net
  10. Director: Lauren MacMullan; Writer: Tim Hedrick (2006-06-14). "The Desert". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 11http://www.avatarspiritmedia.net/transcripts.php?ep=211 |transcripturl= missing title (help). Nickelodeon.
  11. Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino (2007-11-23). "The Day of Black Sun Part 1: The Invasion". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 3. Episode 10http://www.avatarspiritmedia.net/transcripts.php?ep=310 |transcripturl= missing title (help). Nickelodeon.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: John O'Bryan (2006-06-14). "The Library". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 10. Nickelodeon.
  13. Director: Ethan Spaulding; Writers: Michael Dante DiMartino, Joshua Hamilton (2006-09-15). "The Serpent's Pass". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 12. Nickelodeon.
  14. Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writers: Michael Dante DiMartino, Bryan Konietzko (2006-12-01). "The Guru". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 19. Nickelodeon.
  15. Director:Ethan Spaulding; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino (2008-07-19). "Sozin's Comet, Part 1: The Phoenix King". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 3. Episode 18. Nickelodeon.
  16. Mammano, Michael (December 5, 2014). "The Legend of Korra: Operation Beifong Review". Den of Geeks!.
  17. Mammano, Michael (July 8, 2014). "The Legend of Korra: Old Wounds Review". Den of Geeks!.

External links