The Mercury News

Tobi Tobias. 81, was longtime dance critic

- By Neil Genzlinger

Tobi Tobias, whose dance criticism for New York magazine and other outlets made her an influentia­l voice in the genre for decades, died Feb. 13 at her home in Manhattan. She was 81.

Her husband, Irwin Tobias, confirmed the death. He said she had been in declining health for some time.

Tobi Tobias, who was also the author of a number of children’s books, began writing about dance in the early 1970s, starting with an article about Twyla Tharp for the alumni magazine of Barnard College, both women’s alma mater. Armed with that and another article about Tharp for a different publicatio­n — the sum total of her dance writing at that point — she offered her services to Dance Magazine.

To her surprise, William Como, the editor-in-chief, called her in for an interview. Although they differed about a lot of things — “Just for instance, he was a Béjart guy; I was a Balanchine gal,” she wrote on her blog some 40 years later — he enlisted her as a writer and, later in the decade, as an editor of other critics.

She became the dance critic at New York magazine in 1980 and held that post for 22 years. She also wrote for The New York Times, The Village Voice, Bloomberg News and the website Arts Journal, among other outlets.

Her articles for Arts Journal made her a finalist for the 2012 Pulitzer Prize in criticism. The Pulitzer judges singled her out for “work that reveals passion as well as deep historical knowledge of dance, her well-expressed arguments coming from the heart as well as the head.”

As a critic Tobias did not pull punches. In the early 1980s, for instance, when other critics were tiptoeing around the decline in the dance skills of Rudolf Nureyev, who was then in his 40s, she declared, “His groupies refuse to believe it, but Nureyev really can’t dance anymore.”

“Sometimes I felt that she was uncomforta­bly brutal,” dance writer Mindy Aloff said by email, “but she provided a beacon of integrity to the field. She was open to elements of darkness, even ugliness, as well as to beauty, as long as the choreograp­hy and performanc­e met her standards of craft and accuracy.”

Aloff, who was one of the writers Tobias worked with at Dance Magazine, said that one of Tobias’

proudest profession­al achievemen­ts was an oral history she compiled in the 1980s and ‘90s of the classical dance technique and training system known as Bournonvil­le, a hallmark of the Royal Danish Ballet, which August Bournonvil­le led in the 1800s. She learned Danish so she could interview its leading practition­ers, driven partly by concern that the style was falling out of fashion among younger dancers.

“Tobi was passionate about the Bournonvil­le school of classical dancing to the point of obsession,” Aloff, said. “It summed up everything she valued about theatrical dance: liveliness, deep knowledge of tradition, respect between women and men, spiritual humility, meticulous attention to nuance of character and language.”

Tobias donated the oral history to Harvard University. In 1992 she was knighted by Queen Margrethe II of Denmark.

In addition to her husband, she is survived by two children, John and Anne Tobias, and four grandchild­ren.

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