Dan Tobin's career in Hollywood as a small part supporting player
spanned three decades, beginning in 1939. Adding to his slightly shifty
appearance -- squinty eyes, high cheekbones and generally sporting a
thin moustache -- was a fussy, bumptious manner, which made him ideal
typecasting as supercilious, miserly, smugly conceited or obsequious
types. Though Tobin's screen personae could be sinister, or at least
underhanded, they also often provided comic relief, as, for instance,
his somewhat camp, bow-tied employee Gerald Howe in
Woman of the Year (1942). On
stage, he had his biggest hit in
Philip Barry's classic comedy play
"The Philadelphia Story" (Broadway (1939-40), playing the part of
Alexander 'Sandy' Lord.
By the mid-1950's, Tobin had drifted from films towards guest
appearances in early anthology series and sitcoms on television. He had
a regular spot in the final season of
Perry Mason (1957) as
Raymond Burr's restaurateur friend Terrance
Clay. As the ideal character to be deflated, he was also employed to
good comic effect in several episodes of
Bewitched (1964) and
The Ghost & Mrs. Muir (1968).
Tobin retired from acting in 1977 and died five years later at the age
of 72. He had been married to TV scriptwriter
Jean Holloway.