100 minutos
On April 25, 1974, a man walked alone in Largo do Carmo. He knocked on the GNR military barracks door and entered, unarmed and without any escorts. Inside, the Government’s chief, Marcelo Caetano, waited, surrounded by the military and the people. The man who stared at him that afternoon and demanded surrender, guaranteeing his safety, had just led Santarém’s Artillery 1 regiment in taking the capital. Without firing a single shot, he managed to overthrow a regime that was over 48 years old. That was the last step to take and he took it, without hesitation, becoming the unavoidable figure of the day that marked the beginning of democracy in Portugal
Tomás Alves
Salgueiro Maia
Frederico Barata
Delfim
Filipa Areosa
Natércia
José Condessa
Martinho
Rodrigo Tomás
Estêvão
Catarina Wallenstein
Marta
Rita Tristão da Silva
Cátia
Diogo Martins
António Fonseca
Marcello Caetano
Dinarte Branco
Comandante Morgado
Gonçalo Portela
Vasco Lourenço
João Cachola
Carlos Matos Gomes
João Cobanco
Moreira Baptista
João Craveiro
Comandante Montepuez
João Nunes Monteiro
Beato
João de Brito
Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho
José Raposo
Francisco Maia
Júlio Cardoso
António de Spínola
Luísa Cruz
Maria Augusta
Miguel Borges
Almeida
Paulo Calatré
Junqueira dos Reis
Rúben Gomes
Gomes
Simon Frankel
Ruy Patrício
Teresa Côrte-Real
Mãe Natércia
Luís Gaspar
Pedro Pimenta
Ramiro