Netflix is putting one of animation’s most beloved characters — a scene-stealing blind earthbender — at the center of its push to make Avatar: The Last Airbender Season 2 a must-watch event when it lands on June 25.
The streaming platform released a behind-the-scenes featurette Friday offering a first look at the creation of live-action Toph Beifong, played by Miyako Cech — also known as Miya — who serves as Aang’s earthbending teacher in the new season. Co-showrunner Jabbar Raisani described the casting process as “extensive,” with the team reviewing more than 6,000 submissions before landing on Cech through chemistry reads with series lead Gordon Cormier.
Season 2 picks up after Aang, Katara, and Sokka’s bittersweet victory at the Northern Water Tribe, sending the group deep into the Earth Kingdom to seek allies against Fire Lord Ozai. Toph is the key recruit — and the hardest to win over. Cormier describes the dynamic as Toph being “like a really mean older sister” to Aang, but one who is “younger and way stronger.”
The casting stakes are high. Toph ranks among the franchise’s most fan-sacred characters, and the production leaned hard on authenticity to justify the choice. Blindness consultant Joe Strechay worked closely with Cech on the precise physical vocabulary of the role — how Toph touches things, moves through space, and locates objects and people via something resembling echolocation when she bends.
Cech also wore contacts that fully blocked her vision during filming. Strechay said he hoped blind and low-vision children watching the show would genuinely see themselves in the character, and credited Cech with shaping what the live-action Toph ultimately became.
The season runs seven episodes — one fewer than Season 1’s eight — though the total runtime is expected to exceed the first season’s 430 minutes, meaning longer individual episodes. New showrunners Christine Boylan and Raisani have signaled a darker, more intense narrative than Season 1. Both Seasons 2 and 3 were filmed back-to-back in Vancouver and Iceland to lock in the young cast before they aged out of their roles, with Season 3 already in post-production.
The original animated Avatar series, which ran on Nickelodeon from 2005 to 2008, built a devoted global following that has only grown across two decades. Book Two: Earth — the season this adaptation covers — is widely considered the emotional peak of the entire franchise, introducing Toph, the city of Ba Sing Se, and one of animation’s most devastating finales. For the live-action version, getting Toph right isn’t optional.


















































