Bryan Andrews

Personal Info

Known For Art

Gender Male

Bryan Andrews

Biography

Bryan D. Andrews (born 1975) is an American storyboard artist and writer known for his work in science fiction and superhero films. Born in 1975, Andrews began his film career with a credit in Warner Bros. Feature Animation's 1998 film Quest for Camelot. He contributed to Joseph: King of Dreams, Jackie Chan Adventures, Samurai Jack, My Life as a Teenage Robot, and various installments of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, such as Doctor Strange and Avengers: Endgame. Andrews also worked alongside Genndy Tartakovsky to produce the animated series Sym-Bionic Titan for Cartoon Network, which ran for 20 episodes. Andrews was recognised at both the 2004 and 2005 Primetime Emmy Awards for his work on Star Wars: Clone Wars in the category "Outstanding Animated Program (for Programming one Hour or More). He has since received two Primetime Emmys for his work on Samurai Jack, one Primetime Emmy nomination each for Samurai Jack and Escape from Cluster Prime, one Art Directors Guild Award for Avengers: Endgame, and one nomination for Doctor Strange. Bryan D. Andrews was born in 1975. His first film credit was for the 1998 Warner Bros. Feature Animation film Quest for Camelot, on which he worked as a layout assistant. After working on other projects such as Joseph: King of Dreams, Jackie Chan Adventures, and Samurai Jack, Andrews received his first Primetime Emmy Award win in 2004 for Outstanding Animated Program (for Programming One Hour or More) for his work on Star Wars: Clone Wars, an animated television short series created by Genndy Tartakovsky, who also worked with Andrews on Samurai Jack for Cartoon Network. Another Primetime Emmy Award the following year in the same category was given to Andrews alongside the series crew for their work on Clone Wars. Andrews would go on to be nominated twice, with one win, for the Primetime Emmys for his work on the Samurai Jack episode "The Four Seasons of Death." In 2006, Andrews received his second Primetime Emmy nomination as a writer for the My Life as a Teenage Robot special Escape from Cluster Prime. Along with Genndy Tartakovsky and Paul Rudish, he co-created the animated television series Sym-Bionic Titan, which premiered on Cartoon Network on September 17, 2010. After 20 episodes, however, it was cancelled due to a lack of merchandise connected to the series, with the final episode airing April 9, 2011. He also worked with Tartakovsky as a storyboard artist on Iron Man 2, contributing to the climactic final action sequence. Andrews has a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the California Institute of the Arts. Description above from the Wikipedia article Bryan Andrews, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Known For

Art

2019
Captain Marvel

as Storyboard Artist

2019
Primal

as Storyboard Artist

2018
Avengers: Infinity War

as Storyboard Artist

2015
Ant-Man

as Storyboard Designer

2015
Avengers: Age of Ultron

as Storyboard Artist

2014
Guardians of the Galaxy

as Storyboard Artist

2012
John Carter

as Storyboard Designer

2012
The Avengers

as Storyboard Artist

Writer

2019
Primal

as Writer

2019
Primal

as Storyboard

2019
Primal

as Story

2017
Surf's Up 2: WaveMania

as Story Artist

2010
2003
2001
Samurai Jack

as Writer

2001
Samurai Jack

as Story

2001
Samurai Jack

as Storyboard

1998
1998
The Powerpuff Girls

as Storyboard

Actor

2019
Marvel Studios: Expanding the Universe

as Self - Director, What If…? (archive footage)

Director

Marvel Zombies

as Director

2021
What If...?

as Director

2021
What If...?

as Other

2000

Producer

Marvel Zombies

as Executive Producer

2021
What If...?

as Executive Producer

Creator

2010
Sym-Bionic Titan

as Creator