It’s Official: Magnolia Seals Ruth Bader Ginsburg Docu ‘RBG’ In Participant Media Team-Up

UPDATED with confirmation: Magnolia Pictures has confirmed it along with Participant Media has acquired worldwide rights to RGB, the documentary about Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg that world premiered at the Sundance Film Festival over the weekend in the Doc Premieres category.

The deal for the pic directed and produced by Storyville Films’ Betsy West and Julie Cohen includes theatrical, home video, SVOD, and international television. CNN Films has U.S. broadcast rights and produced with Storyville.

Participant already has fully financed Focus Features’ drama On the Basis of Sex, which stars Felicity Jones in the narrative drama being directed by Mimi Leder.

See Magnolia’s release below yesterday’s original break.

PREVIOUS EXCLUSIVE, TUESDAY PM: The pace of deal making at Sundance has been very deliberate, but tonight there’s action on RBG, the Betsy West & Julie Cohen-directed documentary about the storied Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. I’ve heard Magnolia Pictures has emerged as a frontrunner to acquire the film on the 84-year old Bader Ginsburg, whose feisty opinions and 20-pushup workouts garnered her the name Notorious RBG.

The docu premiered Sunday at the MARC Theater and it’s being sold by CNN Films and Cinetic, neither of which could be reached for comment.

A pioneer in establishing gender discrimination law, Bader Ginsburg is sure getting her due on the screen. Aside from the documentary, her formative road to the Supreme Court and her gender discrimination case work is the subject of the Focus Features drama On the Basis of Sex. She’s played by Felicity Jones in that Mimi Leder-directed drama. Bader Ginsburg has also become a fixture of sorts on Saturday Night Live’s Weekend Update, played in commentary segments by Kate McKinnon.

The docu focuses on Ginsburg’s role in defining gender-discrimination law and systematically releasing women from second-class status, she argued six pivotal gender-bias cases in the 1970s before an all-male Supreme Court blind to sexism.

Will update when I hear of deal closure.

Here’s Magnolia’s release confirming the deal:

RBG, the 2018 Sundance Film Festival sensation produced by CNN Films and Storyville Films about the consequential life and legal legacy of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, has been acquired from CNN Films by Magnolia Pictures and Participant Media for worldwide distribution, including theatrical, home video, SVOD, and international television. CNN Films has U.S. broadcast rights to RBG. The film is directed and produced by award-winning filmmakers Betsy West and Julie Cohen of Storyville Films.

“RBG is an incredibly inspirational film about a supremely inspirational woman,” said Eamonn Bowles, president of Magnolia Pictures. “Betsy and Julie have done a phenomenal job highlighting Justice Ginsburg’s tremendous effect on all of our lives. I cannot wait to show it to my daughters.”

Diane Weyermann, president of documentary film and television for Participant Media, said, “Justice Ginsburg is an extraordinary woman with an amazing story that is shared so beautifully in RBG, and the film presents a vital opportunity to encourage public discourse on the persistent barriers in achieving gender parity, as well as to help accelerate continued institutional policy changes necessary to overcome those barriers.”

“We couldn’t be more thrilled to partner with Magnolia and Participant to bring Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s story to theaters around the world, particularly during this historic moment for women’s equality,” said Amy Entelis, executive vice president for talent and content development for CNN Worldwide.

“This dream combination of partners will build upon the excitement that already surrounds RBG – the woman and the film,” said directors West and Cohen. “We are honored to have the opportunity to tell her remarkable story.”

The film is told through the voices of Ginsburg’s family and friends, former clients and colleagues, her close friend and NPR legal affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg, and historic figures whose paths she has crossed, including the son of her close friend and Supreme Court colleague, the late Antonin Scalia. Throughout, interviews with Justice Ginsburg herself add poignant layers to the images and never-before-seen personal home movies that reveal a mostly unknown life of personal challenges, incredible discipline, and a touching, decades-long romance with her husband, the late Martin Ginsburg.

Denied opportunities for employment at prestigious law firms following graduation at the top of her class at Columbia Law School, Ginsburg shaped a legal career around righting injustices for women and minorities. “She’s the closest thing to a superhero I know,” says Gloria Steinem early in the film, referencing Ginsburg’s successful Supreme Court litigation that expanded Constitutional rights for women.

Now at the age of 84, approaching the 25th anniversary of her elevation to the U.S. Supreme Court, Justice Ginsburg has, in recent years, also become an unexpected, intergenerational pop culture icon. West’s and Cohen’s extraordinary access for the film includes footage of Justice Ginsburg spending time at home with her granddaughter, rehearsing for a speaking role with the Washington National Opera, and even lifting weights and doing pushups and planks with her long-time trainer.

While vérité scenes and archival news footage illustrate Ginsburg’s career and personal highlights, expert editing weaves Ginsburg’s speeches, writings, and Supreme Court arguments to round out her historic impact on American life. What emerges is the definitive documentary portrait of Ginsburg: a complex jurist, scholar, opera lover, wife, mother, daughter, and fierce citizen.

For Participant Media, today’s news of the acquisition complements last year’s announcement of the pending release of On the Basis of Sex, a narrative feature film based on Ginsburg’s early professional life. On the Basis of Sex and RBG represent a doubling down by Participant on stories highlighting the urgent need for gender parity. Participant will launch a social impact campaign alongside the two films, highlighting the critical role of law in building a more equitable society.

Said David Linde, CEO of Participant, “Great films are a proven means of raising awareness and galvanizing action, and the more often you can do it, the more positive impact you have on the world. And when a beautiful film like RBG comes around, and with such great partners, you jump on the chance to be involved. We are so appreciative to Betsy, Julie, and CNN Films for their trust in bringing on Participant, and our great friends at Magnolia.”

The deal announced today was negotiated by Stacey Wolf, vice president of business affairs for CNN Worldwide, Kelly MacLanahan, senior counsel, for CNN Worldwide, and John and Eric Sloss of Cinetic Media, on behalf of CNN Films. For Magnolia Pictures, the deal was negotiated by co-executive vice president Dori Begley, senior vice president of acquisitions John von Thaden, and head of business affairs Sarah Hack. For Participant Media, the deal was negotiated by Gabriel Brakin, general counsel and executive vice president of business affairs. RBG is co-produced by Storyville Films and CNN Films. In addition to directing the film, West and Cohen are also producers of RBG. RBG is executive produced by Entelis and Courtney Sexton, vice president of CNN Films. The film’s editor is Carla Gutierrez.

Related stories

'The Devil We Know' Director Stephanie Soechtig On The Terrifying Results Of Corporate Indiscretion -- Sundance Studio

Lionsgate Deals For Sundance Opening-Night Film 'Blindspotting'

'Halfway There' EP Rick Rosenthal Takes Indie Spirit To TV With Spec Pilot -- Sundance Studio

Get more from Deadline.com: Follow us on Twitter, Facebook, Newsletter