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FAME Week Africa Opens Entries for 2026 Inclusive Lens Awards

Africa’s Untold Stories Take Centre Stage

in Features
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In a world where stories shape perception and perception shapes reality, the power of representation has never been more urgent — or more transformative. Across Africa and beyond, a new generation of storytellers is rewriting narratives, challenging norms, and ensuring that voices once pushed to the margins are now impossible to ignore.

It is within this cultural and creative awakening that FAME Week Africa once again steps forward — not just as a marketplace of ideas, but as a movement driving meaningful change across the global screen industry.

And at the heart of that movement lies one of its most impactful initiatives: the 2026 Inclusive Lens Awards.


A Platform Where Representation Becomes Power

Officially open for submissions, the Inclusive Lens Awards are more than a recognition programme — they are a declaration. A declaration that stories matter. That visibility matters. That inclusion is not optional, but essential.

As a flagship initiative of MIP Africa, the awards are dedicated to celebrating storytellers, creators, and innovators who are reshaping the industry through content that reflects the full spectrum of human experience.

From LGBTQ+ narratives to disability inclusion, from children’s programming that embraces diversity to the often-unseen champions working behind the scenes — this is a platform that does not just acknowledge difference, but elevates it.

Submissions will remain open until Friday, 13 July 2026, with finalists announced on Monday, 31 August 2026. The winners will be revealed on Thursday, 29 October 2026, during FAME Week Africa in Cape Town — a fitting stage for stories designed to move the world forward.


Stories That Reflect the World We Live In

At its core, the Inclusive Lens Awards are built on a simple but powerful premise: the stories we tell should reflect the world as it truly is — diverse, complex, and beautifully multifaceted.

To bring that vision to life, the 2026 edition recognises excellence across four critical categories:

  • Best LGBTQ+ Representation (Film & Series – Scripted and Unscripted)
  • Best Disability Representation (Film & Series – Scripted and Unscripted)
  • Best DEI Representation in Kids Programming (Pre-school & Older-school)
  • Unseen Impact Award, honouring those driving inclusion behind the scenes

These are not just categories. They are cultural interventions — designed to challenge outdated narratives, expand visibility, and create space for stories that have historically been overlooked.


A Jury That Mirrors the Future of Storytelling

If the awards are about shaping the future, then the voices selecting the winners must reflect that same vision.

The 2026 judging panel is nothing short of formidable — a collective of industry leaders, cultural architects, and creative disruptors whose work continues to redefine storytelling across the continent and beyond.

Among them is acclaimed writer and producer Karen Jeynes, whose storytelling has resonated on global platforms, alongside powerhouse industry figures such as Lawrancia Mqwebu and Louise Callcott-Stevens, who have played critical roles in building Africa’s creative infrastructure.

Adding a strong cultural pulse to the panel is Kim Jayde, representing the intersection of youth culture, media, and influence in a rapidly evolving digital landscape.

They are joined by change-makers such as Thabile Ngwato, who continues to reshape media ownership and access, and Tarryn Tomlinson, a leading voice in ensuring authentic disability representation on screen.

The panel further includes Tarha McKenzie, driving equitable access across Africa’s film ecosystem, alongside multidisciplinary contributors like Caleb Swanepoel, James Byrne, and Tongai Furusa — each bringing unique perspectives shaped by lived experience and professional excellence.

Together, this jury does more than evaluate content.

It defines the standard.


Storytelling as a Catalyst for Change

The significance of the Inclusive Lens Awards extends far beyond the ceremony itself.

In an industry where representation has historically been uneven, initiatives like this serve as catalysts — accelerating the shift toward a more equitable and inclusive creative economy.

Martin Hiller, Portfolio Director of FAME Week Africa, captures this vision with clarity:

“The Inclusive Lens Awards are about recognising the storytellers who are shifting culture through the stories they choose to tell.”

It is a statement that speaks to a broader truth — that storytelling is not passive. It is active. It influences how societies see themselves, how they understand others, and how they imagine the future.

As Africa’s creative industries continue to gain global momentum, the responsibility to tell authentic, inclusive stories becomes even more critical.

Because with visibility comes influence.

And with influence comes the power to change the world.


Africa. Untold. Unstoppable.

Aligned with the 2026 theme, “Africa. Untold. Unstoppable.”, the Inclusive Lens Awards stand as a powerful reminder that the continent’s greatest stories are still unfolding.

Stories that challenge.

Stories that heal.

Stories that unite.

And stories that refuse to be silenced.

As submissions open, one thing is clear: this is not just an invitation to enter an awards programme.

It is a call to storytellers across Africa and beyond — to step forward, to be seen, and to tell stories that matter.

Because when stories become inclusive, industries evolve.

And when industries evolve, societies follow.

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