Tannishtha Chatterjee on Battling Stage 4 Cancer While Directing ‘Full Plate’: ‘Art Helped Me Heal’

The actor-filmmaker opens up on completing her film during chemotherapy, and how creativity became her source of strength.

Team THR India
By Team THR India
LAST UPDATED: SEP 22, 2025, 14:17 IST|5 min read
Tannishtha Chatterjee
Tannishtha Chatterjee THR India

When Tannishtha Chatterjee looks back at the making of her film Full Plate, it isn’t just about late nights in the editing studio or funding struggles—it’s about confronting cancer head-on, and somehow finding the will to create in the middle of it. “The film was anyway very difficult to make,” she says in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter India. “Our initial financier ran into problems, and it was tough to finish. My co-producers came on board, and I finally completed the edit. I was so relieved—and then, just as I was about to go into music and sound, all this happened. I had to rush into treatment.”

Her words carry the weight of someone who has stared down uncertainty, yet refused to give in. The actor turned filmmaker was diagnosed with stage 4 oligo-metastatic cancer in late 2024. Chemotherapy came in cycles—21 days of survival. “The first 10 days are really bad,” she explains. “You feel like you won’t live. But the next 11 days, everything looks positive. By my third cycle, I told my producers—book the studios, speak to the music director, let’s finish the film.”

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Between IV drips and hospital visits, she built a second rhythm for herself—editing remotely, tweaking the music, even managing to record a song for the film. “We are creative people—we live for this,” she says. “Every time I came to the studio, I listened to the music. It reminded me of the shoot, the memories—it made me feel good. It really helped me heal.”

There is no trace of self-pity when she remembers one particular day. “I patted myself and said, look at this—tomorrow I have chemo, and today I’m here fixing the sound.” It’s a simple statement, but it holds the quiet power of resilience.

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For Chatterjee, creating became her way of surviving. “We are creators—actors, writers, directors, musicians. We create from our experiences. And when the universe gives me an experience, there must be a reason. Through that creation, I am bound to do something more.”

Now, as Full Plate premieres at the Busan International Film Festival, it stands not just as a film, but as living proof of how art can be both an anchor and a cure.

Watch on YouTube

Watch out for our full interview with Tannishtha Chatterjee dropping soon on The Hollywood Reporter India's YouTube channel.

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