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Fundação Santander Portugal e Unicorn Factory Lisboa assinam parceria para empreendorismo

A Fundação Santander Portugal e a Unicorn Factory Lisboa anunciaram a formalização de uma parceria para a implementação em Portugal dos Santander X Awards, uma das principais plataformas globais de apoio ao empreendedorismo, presente em mais de 25 países. As candidaturas à edição nacional abriram a 1 de junho e decorrem até 11 de setembro, com o objetivo de identificar e apoiar projetos inovadores nas categorias de Universidades e Startups.

Na categoria Universidades, a iniciativa procura soluções com potencial de disrupção e altamente escaláveis, que contem com um protótipo que permita a validação com potenciais clientes. Já na categoria Startups, as candidaturas estão abertas para empresas portuguesas que cumpram pelo menos um dos seguintes critérios: ter receitas anuais até 250 mil euros, ter angariado capital até ao limite de 1 milhão de euros, ou ter entre dois e 25 colaboradores a tempo inteiro. Esta edição terá prémios monetários no valor de 30 mil euros, distribuídos pelos vencedores. Em ambas as categorias, os vencedores recebem também divulgação nacional, visibilidade através do Grupo Santander, acesso a mentoria e participação na final do Santander X Global Award 2026.

Após a fase de candidaturas e avaliação, os projetos finalistas terão acesso a um programa de mentoria e apoio que decorrerá entre 21 de setembro e 9 de outubro, culminando numa apresentação e gala final prevista para outubro. Em Portugal, a execução do programa ficará a cargo da Unicorn Factory Lisboa, responsável pela captação de candidaturas, coordenação do processo de avaliação, preparação dos finalistas e organização do evento final.

Gil Azevedo, Diretor Executivo da Unicorn Factory Lisboa, afirma que a parceria reforça o compromisso de dar escala e promover a inovação portuguesa a nível global, permitindo que empreendedores se liguem ao mundo, captem investimento e desenvolvam soluções com impacto. Inês Rocha de Gouveia, Presidente da Fundação Santander Portugal, destaca que o empreendedorismo é uma das forças mais transformadoras para construir uma sociedade mais inovadora e inclusiva, e que investir no empreendedorismo é investir no futuro.

A Unicorn Factory Lisboa, lançada em 2022 pela Câmara Municipal de Lisboa, é uma plataforma que desenvolve iniciativas para potenciar startups e scaleups nacionais e internacionais. Atua em cinco áreas: incubação early stage, programas growth stage para scaleups, apoio soft landing, empreendedorismo jovem e innovation hubs como o Beato Innovation District, web3hub, gaminghub, greenhub, AIhub, healthhub e engineershub. O projeto contribuiu para que Lisboa fosse distinguida como Capital Europeia da Inovação em 2023.

A Fundação Santander Portugal, constituída em 2022, tem como missão transformar a vida de pessoas, empresas e organizações do terceiro setor através da Educação e Capacitação. Desde a sua criação, já apoiou 500 mil pessoas entre os 6 e 66 anos de idade, em todos os distritos do país, através de uma rede de 106 parceiros comprometidos com a Educação, Empregabilidade e Empreendedorismo. A fundação obteve recentemente o estatuto de utilidade pública.

Com esta iniciativa, a Fundação Santander Portugal e a Unicorn Factory Lisboa reforçam o posicionamento do Santander X como um programa líder de apoio à inovação em Portugal e do país como um hub de inovação e empreendedorismo, promovendo o desenvolvimento de soluções com potencial de escala internacional e criando novas oportunidades para empreendedores em diferentes fases de crescimento.

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Tony awards 2026: Death of a Salesman triumphs, as Lesley Manville and John Lithgow also win

Joe Mantello’s stark revival of Arthur Miller’s classic drama takes home six awards, while Ragtime and Schmigadoon! pick up musical wins

A stripped-back take on Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman dominated this year’s Tonys, winning six awards, while Lesley Manville and John Lithgow took home lead acting trophies.

Death of a Salesman was named best revival of a play, with the award-winning director Joe Mantello praising Miller’s story as one that “still talks to us through time”. Star Nathan Lane accepted the award on behalf of the cast, and called it a play that “continues to teach us who we are as humans and Americans”.

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© Photograph: Brendan McDermid/Reuters

© Photograph: Brendan McDermid/Reuters

© Photograph: Brendan McDermid/Reuters

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Tony awards 2026: full list of winners

This year’s Tony awards saw wins for John Lithgow, Laurie Metcalf, Joshua Henry and Lesley Manville

The Lost Boys
Schmigadoon! – WINNER!
Titaníque
Two Strangers (Carry a Cake Across New York)

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© Photograph: Theo Wargo/Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions

© Photograph: Theo Wargo/Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions

© Photograph: Theo Wargo/Getty Images for Tony Awards Productions

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Los Angeles Greek Film Festival Marks 20th Edition With Orpheus Awards in Hollywood

Guests and honorees pose on the red carpet at the 20th Los Angeles Greek Film Festival Closing Night in Hollywood.
Guests and honorees gather on the red carpet during the 20th Los Angeles Greek Film Festival Closing Night and Orpheus Awards Ceremony at the Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood. Photo: UrbaniteLA

The Los Angeles Greek Film Festival marked its 20th edition in Hollywood with the Orpheus Awards Ceremony, honoring Greek and Cypriot filmmakers and paying tribute to Oscar-winning composer Alexandre Desplat.

The festival’s Closing Night Film and Orpheus Awards Ceremony took place on May 31 at the Egyptian Theatre, in collaboration with the American Cinematheque. This year’s edition brought together filmmakers, artists, industry professionals, and supporters of Greek cinema for a week of screenings, red carpet events, tributes, and awards. The festival’s virtual film program continues through June 14.

Founded in 2007, LAGFF has grown into one of the most important platforms for Greek and Cypriot cinema outside Greece. Over the past two decades, it has screened more than 800 films, hosted over 700 filmmakers, and reached an audience of more than 50,000.

Alexandre Desplat honored at closing night

One of the evening’s major highlights was the presentation of the Honorary Orpheus Award to Alexandre Desplat, one of the most acclaimed film composers working today.

Desplat, who won Academy Awards for his scores for The Grand Budapest Hotel and The Shape of Water, received the honor for his contribution to contemporary cinema. Filmmaker Malcolm Washington presented the award during the Closing Night ceremony, while Fay Lellios produced the tribute.

The evening also included a remembrance tribute to George Kolovos of G.P. Kolovos & Associates, a longtime benefactor of the Los Angeles Greek Film Festival.

“The 20th celebratory edition of LAGFF left indelible memories,” said Aristotle Katopodis, Artistic and Festival Director of LAGFF. “Feting Alexandre Desplat, remembering Dean Tavoularis, and paying respects to our 20-year-long benefactors, the Kolovos family, are images deeply etched in our hearts and souls.”

Katopodis also congratulated the filmmakers whose work was celebrated this year and thanked the festival’s supporters, sponsors, and team for championing Greek cinema.

Alexandre Desplat and Solre Desplat on the red carpet at the 20th Los Angeles Greek Film Festival in Hollywood.
Oscar-winning composer Alexandre Desplat and Solre Desplat attend the 20th Los Angeles Greek Film Festival Closing Night and Orpheus Awards Ceremony in Hollywood. Photo: UrbaniteLA

Hold onto me wins best feature film

The Closing Night Film, Hold Onto Me, directed by Myrsini Aristidou, won the Orpheus Award for Best Feature Film.

The film, which previously won the World Cinema Audience Award at Sundance, was one of the leading titles of this year’s festival. Following the screening, actor Michael Grant hosted a Q&A with Aristidou.

KNX Radio’s Vivianne Linou hosted the Orpheus Awards Ceremony.

2026 orpheus awards winners announced by the Los Angeles Greek film festival

In the animation category, Dream by Semiramis Mamata won the Orpheus Award for Best Animation Film. The Special Jury Award for Animation Film went to Poppy Flowers by Evridiki Papaiakovou.

The Orpheus Award for Best Short Film went to Prelude to a Supernova by Christos Artemiou, while the Special Jury Award for Short Film went to Gekas by Dimitris Moutsiakas.

In the feature film categories, Hold Onto Me by Myrsini Aristidou won Best Feature Film. Krysianna Papadakis and Stergios Dinopoulos received the Orpheus Award for Best Director for Bearcave, while Amerissa Basta received the Special Jury Award for Best Director for Life in a Beat.

The Orpheus Award for Best Performance went to Denise Fraga for Dreaming of Lions. Niovi Charalampous received the Special Jury Award for Best Performance for Smaragda – I Got Thick Skin and I Can’t Jump, while Vangelis Mourikis earned an honorable mention for Patty Is Such a Girly Name.

Audience awards and social justice honors

The Audience Award for Feature Film went to Best Friends Forever by Konstantinos Mousoulis. The Audience Award for Short Film went to The Smoker by Alexa Economacos.

The festival also presented its Social Justice Awards in partnership with Loyola Marymount University’s Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts, Department of Classics and Archaeology.

The Social Justice Award for Short Film went to The Wolves Return by Stelios Moraitidis, while the Social Justice Award for Feature Film went to Maysoon by Nancy Biniadaki.

Award presenters included animator Aliki Theofilopoulos, actor and author Patricia Kara, music composer George Kallis, and film distributor Bill Vergos.

The jury panel included Leo Behrens, Nora Bernard, Karen Cifarelli, Cheng Guo, Harrison James, Chieh-Chih Liao, Eric Nazarian, and Irene Soriano Saxon.

Alexandre Desplat and LAGFF Artistic Director Aristotle Katopodis at the 20th Los Angeles Greek Film Festival in Hollywood.
Honorary Orpheus Award recipient Alexandre Desplat with LAGFF Artistic and Festival Director Aristotle Katopodis at the 20th Los Angeles Greek Film Festival Closing Night in Hollywood. Photo: UrbaniteLA

Los Angeles Greek film festival celebrates orpheus awards at the Egyptian theatre

This year’s Closing Night continued LAGFF’s collaboration with the Egyptian Theatre, Netflix, and the American Cinematheque.

The Egyptian Theatre, one of Hollywood’s most historic movie palaces, opened in 1922 and helped shape the early history of film premieres in Los Angeles. Restored through a partnership between Netflix and the American Cinematheque, the venue now combines its historic character with modern projection capabilities.

For LAGFF, the setting offered a symbolic backdrop for a festival that has spent two decades connecting Greek and Cypriot cinema with the wider Los Angeles film community.

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