| Spin Cycle | |
|---|---|
| Written by | Bill Keenan |
| Date premiered | 2025 |
| Place premiered | United States |
| Original language | English |
| Genre | Drama |
| Setting | A laundromat |
Spin Cycle is the debut one-act play of author and screenwriter Bill Keenan. The play premiered Off-Broadway at The Hudson Guild Theatre as part of the 2025 New York Theatre Festival. [1] [2] It was subsequently produced at the Rogue Theater Festival at The Flea Theater in Tribeca. [3] [4]
Spin Cycle unfolds over the course of a stormy night in a nearly empty laundromat, where Marge, the guarded owner in her late thirties, encounters Elliot, a quiet, drifting young man passing through town with little more than a bag of laundry and a notebook. What begins as wary, elliptical conversation—marked by small talk, deflection, and mutual suspicion—slowly deepens into an intimate exchange as the hours pass and the storm rages outside.
As the play progresses, the laundromat becomes a confessional space. Marge reveals the life she built after being abandoned by a man who left her with a child she felt unable to raise, while Elliot discloses the trauma of being emotionally abused by his foster mother who raised him and walked out without explanation to build a new life elsewhere. Through their parallel stories of abandonment, guilt, and survival, it becomes clear that their encounter is not coincidental: Elliot is the son Marge gave up for adoption years earlier.
In the final moments, mother and son confront the cost of separation and how their choices shaped them irrevocably. When dawn comes and the storm lifts, Elliot leaves the laundromat, offering no easy resolution, only the acknowledgment that some wounds never fully disappear—they merely circle back.
On behalf of Air Mail, Jimmy Lux Fox provided a positive review, writing, "Imagine sitting at the diner in Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks and striking up a conversation with one of the strangers there. That’s what happens in Bill Keenan’s new one-act play, Spin Cycle, except the characters are not in a diner but in a dimly lit laundromat, and there’s a storm raging outside." [5] Fox further noted that Spin Cycle harkens back to Sam Shepard, drawing on a spare, restrained style to explore mythic Americana and the emotional trauma left in the wake of fractured families, where chance encounters become moments of reckoning. [5]
Keenan's writing in Spin Cycle is characterized by its raw, gritty realism and psychological depth.