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Liz Berube : ウィキペディア英語版
Liz Berube

Elizabeth "Liz" Safian Berube (born January 7, 1943) is an American comic book artist, best known as a romance comics artist for DC Comics in the 1970s. Simply signing her art "Elizabeth," her modern, stylized art was used to illustrate fashion features, horoscope pages, tables of contents, and other various ornamental pieces. She was also a prolific colorist, first for Archie Comics and later for DC. Throughout her career she has worked on children’s books, greeting cards, and other commissioned work.〔
== Biography ==
Berube was born in Brooklyn, New York, where she was influenced by ''Pogo'' and EC Comics, as well as the movie ''Fantasia''.〔 Fine arts influences included Alphonse Mucha, and the Art Deco and Art Nouveau movements.〔
She attended Martin Van Buren High School in Queens (graduating in at age 16 in 1959),〔 where she started a comic strip for the school newspaper, which has been continued by different students to this day.〔 She studied cartooning at the School of Visual Arts〔 from 1959–1961.
After leaving SVA, Berube became a colorist and assistant editor for Archie Comics, continuing at that publisher in various freelance capacities until 1975.〔 In the early 1960s, she met DC editor Jack Adler, who later brought her into the publisher.〔
In the late 1960s, her newspaper strip, ''Karen'', (credited to her maiden name "Elizabeth Ann Safian")〔Nodell, Jacque.
("Women of the Romance Comics - Interview with Liz Berube!," ) ''Sequential Crush'' (Jan. 13, 2012).〕 was carried by Newsday Syndicate〔 in 40 newspapers at its peak.〔 Berube has called ''Karen'' “my alter ego."
In 1969 she began working on DC’s romance comics line,〔 bringing more modern, stylized art to the genre, which was still being drawn in the realistic style that had become parodied (particularly by Roy Lichtenstein) in Pop Art. One of the few women in the field,〔(Berube entry ), Lambiek's Comiclopedia. Accessed Aug. 10, 2014.〕〔 Berube worked on such titles as ''Date with Debbi'', ''Falling in Love'', ''Girls' Love Stories'', ''Girls' Romances'', ''Heart Throbs'', ''Secret Hearts'', ''Young Love'', and ''Young Romance''. At some point during this period, Berube was offered the position of editor of the whole line, but as a single mother in her mid-twenties, she preferred the flexibility of working from home that pencilling and coloring allowed, and declined.〔 The DC romance line folded a few years later; Berube was the last female contributor.〔Robbins, Trina. ''The Great Women Cartoonists'' (Watson-Guptill, 2001).〕
From the mid-1970s through the 1980s Berube worked as a colorist, mostly for DC. She was known for mixing her own hues and marking the combinations for the printing separators.〔 She also did coloring for Neal AdamsContinuity Studios in the mid-to-late 1980s.〔 Berube credits Jack Adler and Corey Adams (Neal Adams' wife) for teaching her the techniques of comics coloring.〔Stroud, Bryan D. ("Liz Berube interview," ) ''The Silver Age Sage''. Accessed Aug. 10, 2014.〕

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