- Tobin's most memorable roles were as the overbearing secretary, Gerald, in the 1942 film Woman of the Year and the top-billed scientist in Orson Welles's innovative, Peabody Award-winning, unsold television pilot The Fountain of Youth, filmed in 1956 and televised once two years later as an instalment of NBC's Colgate Theatre.
- In 1966, he became a regular during the final season of Perry Mason as the proprietor of Clay's Grill.
- Tobin made his Broadway debut in American Holiday in 1936. He then joined a touring troupe in England and was seen by an impresario in a production of Ah, Wilderness! As a result, he won roles in Behind Your Back at London's Strand Theatre (1937) and Mary Goes to See at the Theatre Royal, Haymarket (1938).
- On television, Tobin was a regular on I Married Joan, My Favorite Husband, Mr. Adams and Eve, and Where Were You.
- Tobin was a native of Cincinnati, and he attended the University of Cincinnati.
- His final film role was opposite John Huston in Welles's The Other Side of the Wind, shot in the early 1970s and released in 2018.
- Dan Tobin was an American character actor in films, television and on the stage.
- Tobin was married to film and television screenwriter Jean Holloway. They met on the set of The First Hundred Years.
- He played Alexander 'Sandy' Lord in the original 1939 Broadway production of Philip Barry's The Philadelphia Story.
- He generally portrayed gentle, urbane, rather fussy, sometimes obsequious and shifty characters, sometimes with a concealed edge of malice.
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