Suhani Kalita
Suhani Kalita is an Indian actor, best known for Tamil cinema. Suhani Kalita began their career in 2003. With 30 credits to their name and an average audience rating of 6.5, Suhani Kalita remains one of the most prolific and celebrated talents in the industry. Suhani Kalita is one of the most closely watched talents of their generation, with a rapidly growing body of acclaimed work.
Biography
Suhani Kalita is an Indian actress who worked primarily in Telugu cinema as a child artist, debuting in the 1996 Telugu film Bala Ramayana. She won the Nandi Award for Best Child Actress for her role in Hindustan - The Mother (2000) and later appeared in Ela Cheppanu (2003) as Mili, playing the younger sister of the lead character Amar. Over her career spanning until the mid-2000s, she appeared in over 45 films across Telugu, Hindi, Malayalam, and Bengali industries, and won the Best Debutant Award at the South Filmfare Awards in 2007. She retired from acting in 2012 to pursue a career in business, holding an MBA from ISB Hyderabad and becoming a travel influencer.
Career Milestones
Film debut
View film →Highest rated: Ela Cheppanu (6.8)
View film →Suhani Kalita by the Numbers
If you watched every Suhani Kalita film back-to-back, you'd be at it for roughly 9 hours. Most-paired with Bhoomika Chawla — 2 films together.
Filmography
See all 30 credits →Collaboration Network
Career Analytics
Language Distribution
Films by Decade
Top Co-Actors
See all →Suhani Kalita has worked most frequently with Bhoomika Chawla (2 films).

Legacy & Influence
Suhani Kalita is a figure in Indian cinema whose career and contributions remain largely undocumented in the public domain. Based on available records, her primary known work is a supporting role in the 2003 Telugu film 'Ela Cheppanu'. The lack of extensive filmography or prominent public presence makes a substantive assessment of her impact on the industry challenging. In such cases, an actor's legacy is often defined by the specific projects they were part of and the niche they occupied within a vast cinematic landscape. 'Ela Cheppanu' itself was a mid-range production in the early 2000s Telugu film industry, a period marked by transition in storytelling and technical styles. Without verified information on further significant roles, awards, or career milestones, it is not possible to construct a detailed narrative of her professional trajectory or her influence on peers, genres, or audiences. Her contribution, therefore, resides in her participation in the collaborative art of filmmaking for that particular project, as part of the broader ecosystem of supporting artists who complete the fabric of regional cinema. Any broader claims regarding her legacy or influence cannot be made with the required confidence due to the absence of verified biographical and professional data.
