Michael
Tobias
President – Dancing Star
Foundation
Michael Tobias is a global
ecologist, author, filmmaker, and President of the
Dancing Star Foundation, a California non-profit
public benefit corporation devoted to animal
welfare, international biodiversity conservation
and environmental education.
Tobias’ research and expertise encompasses numerous
areas of enquiry and have taken him to some 80
countries. He has specialized in an interdisciplinary
approach to critical environmental issues involving
historical, scientific, ethical and philosophical
frameworks for policy research and documentation,
demographic analysis, ecological anthropology,
biodiversity conservation, art history, comparative
literature, the history of ideas, sustainability
issues, animal protection and non-violence activism. In
1996, Tobias received the “Courage of Conscience Award”
for his commitment to animals. In 2004 he was awarded
the Parabola Focus Award for his lifetime body of work.
Tobias obtained his Ph.D. in the History of
Consciousness at the University of California-Santa
Cruz and has lectured widely. He was an Assistant
Professor of Environmental Studies & Adjunct
Assistant Professor of English and the Humanities at
Dartmouth College, an Associate Professor of Humanities
at California State University-Northridge, the Garrey
Carruthers Chair of Honors and Distinguished Visiting
Professor at the University of New Mexico-Albuquerque
and a Distinguished Visiting Professor of Environmental
Studies and, subsequently, Regents’ Lecturer, at the
University of California-Santa Barbara in the
Environmental Department.
Tobias is the author of 37 books (including several
edited anthologies of both fiction and non-fiction).
Some of his better-known works include: World War III:
Population and the Biosphere at the End of the
Millennium, Preface by Jane Goodall; A Vision of
Nature: Traces of the Original World; Nature’s Keepers:
On the Frontlines of the Fight to Save Wildlife in
America; A Day in the Life of India; Voices From the
Underground: For the Love of Animals; Environmental
Meditation; Life Force: The World of Jainism; Voice of
the Planet; Kinship With Animals (co-edited); The Soul
of Nature (co-edited); A Parliament of Science: Science
For the 21st Century (co-edited); A Parliament of
Minds: Philosophy for a New Millennium (co-edited) and
A Parliament of Souls: In Search of Global Spirituality
(co-edited).
Tobias has written, directed, and produced well over
100 films–including TV series, documentaries and
dramas, most pertaining to environmental, cultural,
social or scientific issues. Some of those works
include the 15-part series A Parliament of Minds, the
28-part series A Parliament of Souls, the ten-hour
dramatic miniseries Voice of the Planet, and such other
works as Ahimsa: Non-Violence, Black Tide, Antarctica:
The Last Continent, A Day in the Life of India, A Day
in the Life of Ireland, World War III, The Sky’s On
Fire, River of Love, America’s Great Parks, Element
One, The Hydrogen Age, The Cost of Cool, and three new
feature films, Mad Cowboy, No Vacancy and Hotspots, a
six-hour trilogy for public broadcasting.
Tobias’ work has been viewed and/or read in more than
140 countries. In her Preface to Tobias’ book World War
III, Jane Goodall writes “In “World War III” Tobias
raises a clarion call. A call for aid such as in the
olden days would summon knights in shining armor to
fight under the banner of their king. And now we are
all summoned, each and every one of us...I hope that
those reading this book will join Tobias on the path
toward the more sustainable and compassionate future,
trying to live again as we once did, in harmony with
nature, and no longer at war.” Psychology Today
Magazine writes, “Tobias throws sparks like an
evangelist and has the old-fashioned, wide-ranging
erudition of a Renaissance scholar.” And ecological
historian Dr. Rod Nash says “in an age of increasing
specialization, it is extraordinary to encounter an
author as widely learned as Michael Tobias. Quite
simply, he is among the most imaginative, creative
minds working in the vital field of human experience
and the natural world. He should be regarded as the
Carl Sagan of the Humanities.”
During the 1980s Tobias was the Science & Current
Affairs Producer for PBS-San Francisco (KQED) and the
Executive Producer in Charge of International
Productions for the third largest PBS station in the
U.S., Maryland Public Broadcasting.
Tobias’ work has been viewed and/or read in more than
140 countries. In her Preface to Tobias’ book World War
III, Jane Goodall writes, “Tobias raises a clarion
call. A call for aid such as in the olden days would
summon knights in shining armor to fight under the
banner of their king. And now we are all summoned, each
and every one of us...I hope that those reading this
book will join Tobias on the path toward the more
sustainable and compassionate future, trying to live
again as we once did, in harmony with nature, and no
longer at war.” Psychology Today magazine writes,
“Tobias throws sparks like an evangelist and has the
old-fashioned, wide-ranging erudition of a Renaissance
scholar.” And ecological historian Dr. Rod Nash says
“in an age of increasing specialization, it is
extraordinary to encounter an author as widely learned
as Michael Tobias. Quite simply, he is among the most
imaginative, creative minds working in the vital field
of human experience and the natural world. He should be
regarded as the Carl Sagan of the Humanities.”
During the 1980s Tobias was the Science & Current
Affairs Producer for PBS-San Francisco (KQED) and the
Executive Producer in Charge of International
Productions for the third largest PBS station in the
U.S., Maryland Public Broadcasting.
Tobias’ films have helped shape public policy in
numerous instances from green space land reform bills
in Ohio to clean-up protocols for the U.S. bases in
Antarctica, from hydrogen as an alternative clean
energy source to oversight of regulations regarding
supertankers. Tobias was one of the first filmmakers to
draw attention to ozone depletion and the toll of
biodiversity devastation as a result of the global oil
industry, as chronicled in his shattering film, “Black
Tide,” for Discovery Channel. Tobias received his first
Genesis Award for his national news network documentary
on animal rights made for MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour,
lending balance to an issue often clouded in rhetoric.
Tobias’ film A Day in the Life of India was the most
watched feature documentary in Indian history,
premiering in multiple languages on numerous networks
simultaneously on the night of India’s 50th anniversary
of independence.
Since 1999, Tobias has been the President, CEO, and
Chairman of the Board of the Dancing Star Foundation,
an international organization devoted to animal
welfare, biodiversity conservation and environmental
education and ethics.
Tobias is married to artist, ecologist, and co-author
and filmmaker, Jane Gray Morrison, Executive Vice
President of Dancing Star Foundation.