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For actor-filmmaker Tannishtha Chatterjee, who battled cancer through the year, support came from family, and friends like Shabana Azmi, Dia Mirza and Richa Chadha.
When Tannishtha Chatterjee looks back on the past year, one truth stands out clearly: survival is not a solitary act. “There were days during chemo when I would tell my doctor, I don’t want to do this,” she recalls. “But then I would wake up the next morning and remind myself—I have people who love me, people who depend on me.”
Her sister became a pillar of strength, caring for Tannishtha’s young daughter in New York for months while managing her own family and career. “She was the one who told me to stop thinking I had to be the strongest all the time. She said, "reach out, you need support too.”
Taking that advice, Chatterjee turned to her friends—including Shabana Azmi, Dia Mirza, and Richa Chadha—who stepped in without hesitation. They organised themselves into what she calls a “healing group,” drawing up rosters to accompany her to chemotherapy, arrange transport, and even cover for household help when needed.
What might have been lonely hours in a hospital instead became a space for laughter and solidarity. “We had music, stand-up comedy, even political debates in my room, like we were solving world problems,” she says with a smile. “My nurses used to peek in, wondering what was going on.”
Through it all, she discovered the sheer abundance of unconditional love. “I had nothing to give anyone during that time, and yet I received so much. It cleared away all the negativity—the doom and gloom we carry as artists.”
The experience, she admits, reshaped her completely. “It has taught me to be fearless, and shameless too—shameless about asking for help. Because people genuinely want to be there for you.” Along with that came a renewed sense of purpose. “Life is fragile. But until my time comes, I will make films, laugh with my friends, and send my daughter to New York. I will live.”
Chatterjee’s directorial venture Full Plate, starring Kirti Kulhari, had its world premiere at the Busan International Film Festival. Made against all odds and completed during her treatment, the film drew packed screenings and earned her the Marie Claire Visionary Director Award.