Ann Brewster was an American cartoonist and illustrator during the Golden Age of comics.
17 Facts About Ann Brewster
Ann Brewster provided art for many different publishers, including Ace Magazines, Fiction House, and Atlas Comics.
Ann Brewster was born Shirley Sonya Zweifach to Abraham Marks Zweifach and Anna Silverman on November 20,1918.
Ann Brewster spent part of her life in the Bronx borough of New York City before moving to Mount Vernon, in 1927.
Ann Brewster died on July 9,2005, in New York City.
Ann Brewster spent forty years as an artist for comic books, magazines, and novels.
Ann Brewster's career began in Jack Binder's "Binder Comic Shop" in 1941.
In March 1942, Ann Brewster created her first comic art for Fiction House's Sheena comics.
Ann Brewster was the artist for 15 Sheena comics between 1942 and 1946.
In 1944, Brewster joined Jerry Iger's S M Iger Studio.
Ann Brewster worked with Robert Hayward Webb to produce the issue retelling Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, which was adapted for comics by Ruth A Roche.
Between September 1949 and July 1958, Ann Brewster was the artist for 74 issues of Atlas, now Marvel, Comics.
The last two decades of Ann Brewster's career featured her as an illustrator for various novels and magazines.
Ann Brewster contributed to 36 comics for Fiction House, most while an artist for Jerry Iger's studio.
Cameron said that Ann Brewster was hard working, dedicated, and faithful to her art.
Cameron continues on to mention that Ann Brewster was considered an excellent children's novel illustrator.
Ann Brewster was a featured artist in 15 issues of Sheena, the most she contributed for any one comic book title.