This blog post takes a look at Ruben Grijalva’s play Value Over Replacement, a bold Marin County drama staged by Ross Valley Players in Ross. The show digs into fame, doping, and fractured families.
Through Chip Fuller’s rise and fall, the production nudges audiences from Larkspur, San Rafael, Novato, and Sausalito to wonder: what happens when we worship heroes who turn out to be deeply flawed?
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A Marin-Made Production at Ross Valley Players
Set against the mess of a public scandal, the story follows former minor leaguer Edward “Chip” Fuller. He claws his way to a four-year major league stint with the fictional San Francisco Knights—performance-enhancing drugs in the mix, of course.
The drama plays out in real time as Chip faces public humiliation and a tough moral crossroads. Does he finally admit the truth or keep denying his part in the fallout?
Ken Sonkin directs with an eye on family tension rather than spectacle, which honestly feels right for Marin’s smaller theaters from San Anselmo to Ross.
Bruce Vieira’s sound design gives the show a pulse you can feel. Erik Forst pops in for cameos that hit just when things need a jolt.
The show runs through April 12. Audiences from Mill Valley and Tiburon remember those days of tabloid headlines and oversized personalities.
Cast & Creative Team
- Chip Fuller — Woody Harper brings a magnetic, conflicted edge to a player who traded his integrity for attention.
- Dan Drake — David Kudler oozes glib bravado as Chip’s radio counterpart, always looking to spin scandal into ratings.
- Mike Clawson — David Schiller plays the teammate who first nudges Chip toward HGH and Dianabol, with scenes that echo a messy family history.
- Emily Fuller — Rachel Ka‘iulani Kennealy nails the role of a wife balancing compassion, endurance, and a righteous anger built up over years.
- Alex — Amelia J. Stafford plays a baseball-loving autistic son whose honesty gives the play its real moral center.
- Peggy Bridges — Jennifer Reimer brings to life a mother who blames the sports machine for her son’s death, adding a cutting perspective on loss and responsibility.
Themes and Real-World Parallels
Grijalva’s script leans into echoes of the Barry Bonds era, swapping in a fictional Ken Hobbes to poke at hero worship and denial. He digs into how athletes, media, and fans all play their part in a culture obsessed with quick success, sidestepping the messier truths.
This tension feels especially sharp in Marin’s sports circles, from San Rafael Little League diamonds to Novato high school gyms.
The drama keeps asking: how do families cope when someone they love—a star, no less—gets exposed? Casting and direction lock in on the human cost, wounds that headlines and talk radio can’t patch up.
Character Highlights
- Chip Fuller — a conflicted star caught between fame’s temptations and his own conscience.
- Dan Drake — a smooth co-host who knows how to turn any disaster into a payday.
- Mike Clawson — the teammate whose tip-off about HGH and Dianabol launches Chip’s rise and triggers the show’s roughest flashbacks.
- Emily Fuller — a steady partner trying to hold the family together under the glare of public judgment.
- Alex — a blunt, baseball-crazy son whose struggles push everyone toward honesty.
- Peggy Bridges — a grieving mother who forces the audience to question the sports establishment’s willingness to look the other way.
Marin Flavor: Local Color and Community Echoes
From San Rafael to Ross, Mill Valley to Corte Madera, the play’s themes hit home in a region famous for its community theaters and Bay Area sports obsession. Families here juggle Little League, schoolwork, and work life, and the tension between pride and the price of fame feels familiar.
In Fairfax and Larkspur, folks reading this newspaper might spot the same push-pull between local pride and the cost of chasing the spotlight. The Ross Valley Players have put together a show that Marin parents, coaches, and fans could easily end up debating over coffee after a matinee, whether that’s at the Lands End café in Sausalito or the Marinwood markets near Novato.
The space is small, but the questions are big. Audiences from all over—from Albany–adjacent neighborhoods to the edges of Point Reyes—find themselves reflecting on how hero worship seeps from the bleachers to the radio booth and right into the living room.
It’s the kind of show that gets people talking in the parking lots of Tiburon and on the benches along Embarcadero in San Francisco, even as it stays rooted in the Marin experience.
Reception & Where to See It
- Critical reception: A local critic applauds its brave, emotionally honest look at the consequences awaiting confessed athletes. They give it a strong four out of five stars.
- Showtimes: Through April 12. Performances regularly attract families from San Anselmo, San Rafael, and Novato.
- Venue: Ross Valley Players sits at the heart of Marin theater life in the Ross Valley. The intimate stage makes every flashback hit a little closer to home.
If you’re in Marin County and craving a thoughtful evening that speaks to the pressures on athletes, Value Over Replacement might be worth the drive from Mill Valley or even Pacifica.
Grab tickets and check schedules through the Ross Valley Players box office. Maybe plan a post-show meetup in San Rafael or take a quick stroll along the 5th Street corridor—there’s something about this part of the Bay Area that just feels alive with theater energy.
Here is the source article for this story: Theater review: Marin resident’s baseball drama a hit
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