Brian Ervine

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Brian Ervine (born Belfast 1950) is a playwright, songwriter and teacher living in Belfast, Northern Ireland.

He was educated at Grosvenor Grammar Schhol, Belfast, a contemporary of future soccer legend George Best. He studied at Queen's University, Belfast, graduated with degrees in both Theology (B.D.), English (B.A.) and a professional teaching qualification (PGCE). He subsequently taught English and Religion at Orangefield High School in east Belfast. Alumni of Orangefield include Van Morrison, Brian Keenan and his brother David Ervine.

His play, "Somme Day Mourning", tells the story of working class east Belfast men who gave their lives at the battle of the Somme in 1917. The play also features original music and lyrics written by Brian Ervine.

The Northern Irish playwright St John Ervine (1883-1971) was a distant relative.

In 2005, at a special ceili in the Great Hall of Stormont Parliament Building, hosted by Tommy Sands of Downtown Radio, David Ervine sang "Leaving Dalriada", an emotive ballad written by Brian Ervine, about an exile who was ordered to leave the country by a gunman. "

Brian Ervine presented "Dalriada", a local radio programme focused on Ulster-Scots culture.

When his brother, David Ervine, leader of the Progressive Unionist Party, died in 2007, Brian Ervine stood unsuccessfully for the leadership of the party. He lost to Dawn Purvis.

At David ervine's funeral, Brian Ervine was pictured in the international media standing next to his brother's widow, Jeanette Ervine, while she was embraced by the president of Sinn Fein, Gerry Adams. In his address to mourners at the funeral, Brian Ervine said his brother was able to "translate the bloodstained tragic prose of violence and hatred to the poetry of peaceful co-existence . . . He had the guts and the courage to climb out of the traditional trenches, meet the enemy in no-man's land and play ball with him."


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