Whatever you do, do all your bending while the brass is at room temperature.
When brass is bent hot, most of it tends to break or crumble.
This is because most brass has a little bit of lead in it. When you heat the brass, the lead melts, or at least softens, and goes to the crystal (grain) boundaries. Either it embrittles the brass or you are bending a bunch of crystals with liquid lead sort of sticking them together.
Why lead? Brass castings have lead added to improve castability. It reduces leaks in plumbing fixtures, except in California where they don't like to drink that lead. Most brass in bar form is going to be machined, a little bit of lead is added for machinability. Likewise plate or heavy sheet tends to be engraved, or have keys machined out of it. So a bit of lead is added.