Barbara Brandon-Croft is an American cartoonist, best known for creating the comic strip,, and for being the first nationally syndicated African-American female cartoonist.
Background
Brandon-Croft was born in Brooklyn, New York, to Brumsic Brandon Junior. Her father was also a cartoonist and he was the creator of the comic strip Luther which was in circulation from 1970 to 1986 under the Los Angeles Times Syndicate newspapers. She and her father are said to represent the only occurrence of father-daughter newspaper cartoonists.
Education
She attended the College of Visual and Performing Arts at Syracuse University.
Career
In 1982, she developed a cartoon feature for Elan, a magazine for black women. She later joined the staff of Essence magazine as their fashion and beauty writer She also did illustrations for The Crisis, published by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, The Village Voice, and Master of Computer Applications Records.
Brandon Croft"s illustrating talent had developed naturally.
Growing up she helped her father with his comics in exchange for allowance. She was first recognized for the comic strip She later did other illustrations including Sista Girl-French Breaks lieutenant Down..When Mom"s Not Around.
Brandon Croft also created a line of illustrated greeting cards for OZ.
Brandon-Croft started publishing beginning in 1989 in the Detroit Free Press. The comic strip traces the experiences of about twelve African-American women and gives insight into the challenges of being an African American woman living in the United States.
lieutenant features characters such as Alisha, Cheryl, Lekesia, Nicole and others
The characters are based on Brandon and her real-life friends. The artwork is minimalistic. There is an absence of backdrop drawings, with the focus solely on the characters who are represented by drawings of their upper torso.
Speech bubbles are also omitted and the characters address the reader directly. went into national syndication in 1991 with the Universal Press Syndicate making Brandon-Croft the first female black cartoonist to be nationally syndicated.
lieutenant was the first comic strip by a black woman to be syndicated in mainstream newspapers. The comic strip was featured in more than sixty newspapers between 1989 and 2004.
lieutenant appeared in newspapers throughout the United States, including Essence, The Sacramento Bee, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and The Baltimore Sun, as well as in The Gleaner in Jamaica and the Johannesburg Drum magazine. Brandon-Croft ceased publication of the comic strips in 2005 after subscriptions dwindled.