A Book
Not just a movie, but a book was also published under the name of The Woman Who Wasn’t There. The book told how Head rose to fame with the World Trade Center Survivor’s Network and fell tragically from grace.
Comment
While releasing his movie, Guglielmo commented, “I suppose Tania had intervals of believing her magnificent story. But there must also have been cruel, brief interludes of clarity when she understood this was a world she had created and that – unlike her ordeal on the 78th floor – there was no savior and no way out.”
No Reason
There seems to have been no certain reason why Tania would do what she did. “I still get moved when I think of her dignified, understated talk about an unimaginable and horrible loss,” Craig Miller, the person who had brought Tania to speak at New York’s Baruch College, told The New York Times.
A Good Person
“To me, Tania was a beautiful woman,” filmmaker Angelo J. Guglielmo wrote in a 2012 article for HuffPost. “Not in the conventional sense – but in other, more vulnerable ways: her bold reproof of death, her passion about doing something vital with her survivor experience; her conviction; the message she embodied of living through the pain no matter what. Everyone fell in love with her.”
Everything Gone
After all the lies that Tania had woven, she lost everything. WTCSN voted and her position as presidentship was terminated in 2007. She lost all of her reputed fame and it was all back talks and disgrace that was left in her kitty now.
Vague Admittance
According to Janice Cilento, a WTCSN board member, Tania had eventually admitted that she had been indulged in a fantasy about Big Dave. She confessed about never really being in a relationship with a person named Dave.