Eugène Dervain


Emile Eugène André Dervain was a Martinican-Ivorian playwright, lawyer and judge.

Life

Émile Eugène André Dervain was born on February 4, 1928, in Saint-Esprit in central Martinique. He married a woman from the west of the Ivory Coast, and was naturalized as Ivorian in 1967.
Dervain's Saran ou la Reine scélérate was a historical play set in the early nineteenth century, in Da Monzon's semi-legendary rule over the kingdom of Ségou, and drawing on oral epic tradition. A prologue invoked classical precedent:
Dervain's 1969 one-act play Abra Pokou was based on Queen Pokou, the mythical founder of the Baoulé people of the Ivory Coast.
Trained as a lawyer, Dervain became a barrister at the Court of First Instance in Abidjan. From 1986 to 1988, he was president of the Bar Association in Abidjan. Dervain went on to serve as judge, prosecutor and investigating judge at the Court of First Instance. He was also President of the Côte d'Ivoire section of Amnesty International, and a member of the Academy of Sciences, Arts, African Cultures and African Diasporas.

Works

Saran: ou, La reine scélérate & La langue et le scorpion; pièces en trois et quatre actes . Yaoundé, Éditions Clé, 1968.Abra Pokou; pièce en un acte, Yaoundé: Éditions CLE, 1969.Termites: théâtre. Paris: P.J. Oswald, 1976.Une vie lisse et cruelle: poèmes . Abidjan: Edilis, 1999.