Tobbala was born in Cairo on July 12, 1941 to a middle-class family. She married in 1960 after finishing her secondary education at a French missionary school. Tobbala has two children, born in 1962 and 1964. She received a Bachelor of Arts degree in French literature and a Master of Arts degree and PhD in mass communications from Cairo University. Tobbala worked in Egyptian television as a director, screenwriter and producer from 1966 to 2001, specialising in documentaries. She also held a number of managerial positions in the areas of planning and programming. Since 1987, Tobbala has taught courses in television and documentary production to undergraduate students and young broadcasting professionals in several schools. She began writing books for children in 2005, at age 64. Tobbala collaborated with watercolor painter Adly Rezkallah on her first book, The Silver Fish, which received a mention in the Bologna Children's Book Fair Ragazzi Award's New Horizons category and Egypt's Suzan Mubarak Prize. She has published 13 more books for children and a short-story collection, collaborating with a number of artists using different styles and techniques. Writing for different age groups, Tobbala has received national, regional and international awards. Several of her books have been translated from Arabic into English, Turkish and Korean.
Filmography
Muaadala : five-episode documentary
Elsharia Almasry : five-episode documentary about historic Cairo
Mawdue Lelmunaqashah : political-documentary series with round-table discussions
Shuun Saghira : six-episode documentary about customs with unwanted social effects
Awards and honours
The Silver Fish was mentioned in the New Horizons category of the 2006 Bologna Book Fair for Children's Literature Ragazzi Awards, and received Egypt's Award for Children's Literature that year. Sika and Mokka received the 2007 Suzan Mubarak Prize, and was included in the 2010 IBBY List of Honor. Dom... Tata... Dom was shortlisted for the 2009 Etisalat Award for Arabic Children's Literature. Old Papers was one of 10 books in the Anna Lindh Foundation's 2010 Honor List for Children's Books in the Arab World. The House and the Palm Tree received the 2011 Sheikh Zayed Award for Children's Literature in the Arab World. It was the January 2012 book of the month of the Arab Book Forum Readers' Club. The Eye received the 2011 Anna Lindh Foundation's Arab Children's Literature Award. Oud Al Sanabel received the 2013 Etisalat Award for Arab Children's Literature, and was nominated by the Egyptian Board on Books for Young People for the 2016 Hans Christian Andersen Award.