A New Ruth Bader Ginsburg Documentary Finds Its Heart in Love, Not Law

 
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A New Ruth Bader Ginsburg Documentary Finds Its Heart in Love, Not Law
5/7/2018                                   RBG: Betsy West and Julie Cohen’s New Documentary Is a Love Story, Too - Vogue

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           C U LT U R E   > T V & MOVIES

           A New Ruth Bader Ginsburg Documentary Finds
           Its Heart in Love, Not Law
           M AY 4 , 2 01 8 1 : 2 0 P M
           by R O B E R T S U L L I VA N

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https://www.vogue.com/article/rbg-documentary-review                                                                        1/11
A New Ruth Bader Ginsburg Documentary Finds Its Heart in Love, Not Law
5/7/2018                                   RBG: Betsy West and Julie Cohen’s New Documentary Is a Love Story, Too - Vogue

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                Photo: Getty Images
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                 The Ruth Bader Ginsburg documentary, RBG, directed by Betsy West and Julie
                 Cohen, is probably not what you think it is, or even what, given the partisan
                 hoopla in which we attempt to live our lives, you’d be forgiven for thinking it
                 might be: a fawning polemic detailing a liberal justice battling the court’s right
                 wing. There is fawning, though a fair amount is done by conservatives,
                 including soon-to-retire Republican Senator Orrin Hatch and Antonin Scalia,
                 the conservative justice and, until his death in 2016, the BFF of RBG. But the
                 film is a deftly crafted portrait of a refreshingly wildly mild-mannered legal
                 mind who was a powerful force in American life long before she donned the
                 black robes and her trademark collars (one for dissenting opinions, one when
                 she is siding with the majority, a fashion touch she developed with her female
                 justice predecessor, Sandra Day O’Connor). What’s surprising to a casual
                 follower of the judicial branch is that you’ll be reaching not for your legal pad

https://www.vogue.com/article/rbg-documentary-review                                                                              2/11
A New Ruth Bader Ginsburg Documentary Finds Its Heart in Love, Not Law
5/7/2018                                   RBG: Betsy West and Julie Cohen’s New Documentary Is a Love Story, Too - Vogue

                 while watching the film, but the tissues, given that what actually underpins RBG
                 is a love story.

                 The opening credits, by the way, are genius, a brilliant gimmick in a time when
                 documentaries are decorating themselves with more dumb gimmicks all the
                 time. I won’t spoil the visuals, but we hear what I’ll call disembodied male
                 Beltway voices chiding the second female justice appointed to the U.S. Supreme
                 Court in her absence, the way male voices are wont to do. “This witch! This
                 evildoer! This monster!” rants one. ”She’s one of the most vile human beings—
                 she’s wicked,” says another. Says a voice that sounds a lot like the current head
                 of the executive branch: “She has no respect for the traditions of our
                 constitution, none.” Like Donald Trump, Ginsburg is a native New Yorker, and
                 the story begins with “Kiki” Bader, a young girl in Brooklyn who is the child of
                 Eastern European immigrants and likes to climb roofs with the boys. Even back
                 then, her high school friends knew her as a deep thinker. “You knew she was
                 listening,” says one, interviewed for the film. “She didn’t do small talk,” says
                 another.

                 Ginsburg’s mother is portrayed as strict and loving, dying the night her
                 daughter was about to graduate high school, after all but hiding a horrible
                 cancer and instilling in her daughter the mantra that she cites over and over in
                 the film: “Don’t allow yourself to be overcome by useless emotions like anger.”
                 At Cornell, during the anti-Communist trials staged by Senator Joseph
                 McCarthy and Roy Cohn (a mentor to the current POTUS), Ginsburg
                 recognized the advantages of using the law to change the world for the better,
                 and ended up being one of nine women at Harvard Law, where, at a dinner,
                 the dean asked each to explain why they were taking the seat that could have
                 been taken by a man. When she graduated, none of the major firms in New
                 York City would hire a woman, and she took a job teaching. At Rutgers, she
                 began to carefully choose cases as the women’s movement is taking to the
                 streets—one of the first being Frontiero v. Richardson, involving Air Force
https://www.vogue.com/article/rbg-documentary-review                                                                        3/11
5/7/2018                                   RBG: Betsy West and Julie Cohen’s New Documentary Is a Love Story, Too - Vogue

                 Lieutenant Sharron Frontiero, who was denied benefits for her husband on the
                 basis of gender. When Ginsburg approached the Supreme Court justices for the
                 first time, in 1973, they were treated to her systematic analysis of the ways in
                 which the legal system kept women down, through thousands of state and local
                 laws. “Men and women are persons of equal dignity, and they should count
                 equally before the law,” she would later say. She would go on to win five of the
                 six cases she argued at the Supreme Court, as a cofounder of the ACLU’s
                 Women’s Rights Project.

                 R E L AT E D V I D E O

                 Watch: Exclusive: Watch the Stars of the New Documentary Step Stomp
                 Around in Brooklyn

                 Looking back, her colleagues are amazed at how her opponents were so
                 unprepared to deal with her genius and preparation. Less amazing is that the
                 justices could be jerks. “And so, Mrs. Ginsburg, you won’t be satisfied with
                 Susan B. Anthony’s face on the new dollar?” former Chief Justice William
                 Rehnquist joked. Asked by one of the filmmakers how she responded to snide
                 and sexist remarks, she pauses, as she so often does. “Never with anger, as my

https://www.vogue.com/article/rbg-documentary-review                                                                        4/11
5/7/2018                                   RBG: Betsy West and Julie Cohen’s New Documentary Is a Love Story, Too - Vogue

                 mother taught me, that would have been self-defeating—always as an
                 opportunity to teach,” she says. (The mantra appeared to haunt her after she
                 called Trump “a faker.”) “I did see myself as a kind of kindergarten teacher in
                 those days, because the judges didn’t think sex discrimination existed. Well,
                 one of the things I tried to plant in their mind at that point was: Think about
                 how you would like the world to be for your daughters and granddaughters.”
                 She was making what was, sadly, a radical case, but proceeding in a technically
                 conservative manner, her m.o. to this day. She was not only not a rabble-rouser
                 but in meetings, she rarely spoke. “Marching and demonstrations just weren’t
                 her thing,” says a colleague.

                 Nor was cooking. “I still can’t eat swordfish to this day after what she did to it,”
                 says her now adult son. She was nonetheless working out a new domestic
                 paradigm at home, or something that looked new in contrast to what was
                 expected in the 1960s, one that started with what the film portrays as a
                 beautiful partnership. “He was the first boy that I ever met who cared that I
                 had a brain,” Ginsburg says. “Most guys in the ’50s didn’t.” Ginsburg argues
                 that she survived the intense scrutiny of being one of nine women at Harvard
                 Law, because of her family—her husband, who encouraged her, and her 14-
                 month-old child whose existence encouraged her to organize her time. “She
                 gave me perspective and she kept me sane,” he says. Then, more complications
                 arose. In his third year of law school, Marty Ginsburg was diagnosed with a
                 rare testicular cancer, and Ruth collected notes from his classmates and spent
                 her evenings typing them up for him before getting to her own work (he later
                 credited his recovery “in part to his wife’s ability to juggle caring for him, their
                 young daughter, and their dual legal studies,” according to CNN). “It’s when
                 she learned to burn the candle at both ends,” says Nina Totenberg, the NPR
                 legal reporter. The film skips over the couple’s pre–law school time in
                 Oklahoma, when Marty was stationed at Fort Sill, but it was while working for
                 the Social Security Administration that the 21-year-old Ginsburg was demoted
                 for being pregnant.
https://www.vogue.com/article/rbg-documentary-review                                                                        5/11
5/7/2018                                   RBG: Betsy West and Julie Cohen’s New Documentary Is a Love Story, Too - Vogue

                 She was appointed to the federal judiciary by Jimmy Carter, who made
                 numerous appointments of women and people of color. By the time Justice
                 Byron White announced his retirement, in the first term of President Bill
                 Clinton, while Clinton initially wanted Governor Mario Cuomo, he was
                 persuaded by Marty’s all-out campaign. “I can’t think of anyone less likely to
                 tout her own horn than Ruth, so Marty had to play the New York
                 Philharmonic,” says a friend.

                 The interviews with the children are hilarious and heartwarming (has the word
                 exigent ever before been used to compliment a mom?), and the film goes a long
                 way to consider a question that The New York Times, back in 1993, said
                 people had been asking since her appointment to the court: “. . . whether she is
                 steely or just cold, a passionate fighter or a dry proceduralist, aloof or simply
                 shy.” The question itself can be sexist, given that “aloof,” “steely,” and “cold”
                 can be compliments for a man, though when I spoke with the directors, they
                 reminded me that at the time, displays of emotion would have hurt her (sadly,
                 not unlike now). “She had made a very conscious effort to be taken seriously in
                 a culture of men,” said Cohen.

                 Missing is more of an idea of how the judge sees the future, or her role on a
                 court that saw her as a left-leaning moderate when she arrived and now, as
                 people contemplate her leaving, off with Sonia Sotomayor in a lonely liberal
                 wilderness. The 85-year-old’s kickass workout routine would indicate that she
                 will be around for a while, but we are left to wonder how she sees her dissents:
                 as screams in a legal landscape in which corporate personhood continues to be
                 increased (see Citizens United v. FEC) while, for instance, the Voting Rights
                 Act is decimated? Or are they designed to mark a legal trail back to a place
                 more hospitable to a greater justice? (For more on this idea, see the eminent
                 legal scholar Linda Greenhouse in The New York Times last month.) I asked
https://www.vogue.com/article/rbg-documentary-review                                                                        6/11
5/7/2018                                   RBG: Betsy West and Julie Cohen’s New Documentary Is a Love Story, Too - Vogue

                 the directors about this, too. “I think Justice Ginsburg takes the long view,” says
                 West. “She’s optimistic.” Watching RBG, you certainly get the feeling that the
                 justice knows exactly what she’s doing—still working till 3:00 and 4:00 in the
                 morning, her husband no longer around to tell her to sleep. The only time she
                 appears to take off is for the opera, where she claims to see everything that’s in
                 the law—justice, beauty, the turmoil on which our lives attempt to stay afloat—
                 played out on the stage. “I’m overwhelmed by the beauty of the music, the
                 drama—and the sound of the human voice. It’s like an electrical current.” We
                 are fortunate as a body politic that this judge is as in love with procedure as she
                 is with the world.

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