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en.wikipedia.org
09 Jul, 1992
01 Aug, 2025
Cancer
American
American actress
33
Kelley Mack was a rising actress and storyteller whose light was brief but bright—someone who carried raw talent, warmth, and an expanding scope of work across television, film, voice-over, and production. In her 33 years she built a reputation not just for roles, but for creativity, generosity, and connection. Her story is one of hope, struggle, reinvention, and the kind of artistry that touches others deeply.
Kelley Lynne Klebenow was born on July 10, 1992, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Her parents, Kristen and Lindsay, raised her in a family that moved often, exposing her early to different towns, schools, and communities. She had siblings, including a younger brother, Parker, who also found his way into the world of acting. From early childhood, Kelley showed a spark—she began performing in commercials for brands like Dr. Pepper, Ross Stores, Dairy Queen, and Chick-fil-A. That gift for presence—camera awareness, emotional truth—first sharpened in small roles, but with ambition.
She graduated high school from Hinsdale Central, then pursued film more formally, studying cinematography at Chapman University’s Dodge College of Film and Media Arts. She carried both the technical eye and the performer’s curiosity, combining behind-the-camera learning with being in front of it.
Her time in school wasn’t just about technique; it was about identity. Studying cinematography taught her to see light, shadow, framing—how meaning lives not only in line delivery but in shot composition. Commercials in childhood taught her professionalism early; student film work allowed her to experiment and find voice. Family influence, steady support, and the ups and downs of moving around gave her a flexibility of character—and later a compassion for roles grounded in human reality.
Kelley’s professional life unfolded in phases: early exposure & commercials; gradual work in television & film; expanding into producing and voice work; and finally confronting illness with creativity and courage.
As a child and teenager, commercials were her entry point. She learned early how short moments—seconds—could require full authenticity. These early gigs built more than resume pieces; they built her desire to tell stories, to connect.
Her breakout to wider audiences came when she played Addy in The Walking Dead (Season 9), a role that introduced her to fans of a major television franchise. Alongside that, she worked in Chicago Med, 9-1-1, and in independent films such as Broadcast Signal Intrusion and Delicate Arch. Each role added dimension: sometimes guest-parts, sometimes roles in indie work that flexed emotional range, sometimes parts that pushed genre boundaries. As both actress and producer, she took more control of the kind of work she wanted, choosing projects aligned with her values and curiosity.
Beyond acting, Kelley ventured into producing; she contributed creator energy in small films, and her voice work—from commercials to small roles—showed her versatility. She didn’t just want to be seen; she wanted to shape stories. During this period she also embraced roles that involved both vulnerability and strength—characters who faced fear, who were wounded, who survived. Her approach was earnest, grounded, generous in giving her co-actors room, in bringing humanity to even brief moments onscreen.
In late 2024 and early 2025, Kelley began feeling pain and discomfort. After tests, she was diagnosed with a form of glioma—a brain/spinal cord cancer. She lost mobility in her legs, underwent proton radiation treatment, but also kept working when possible, kept speaking about the experience, kept connecting with people. She didn’t disappear from creativity; she continued to be present. In August 2025, she passed away in Cincinnati, aged 33, surrounded by family, after a fight marked by courage, love, and faith in her work.
Off camera, Kelley was known for her warmth and loyalty. She was in a relationship with Logan Lanier. Family meant a great deal—the support of parents, siblings, grandparents. She loved collaborating, telling others how much she appreciated her colleagues. She also found joy outside acting—in music, in storytelling, in time with loved ones. Even through illness, she expressed gratitude and hoped to bring comfort to others facing similar struggles.
Though her time was short, Kelley Mack leaves behind something lasting:
A body of work that spans television, film, production, and voice work—showing she saw artistry as multifaceted, not confined.
Roles like Addy in The Walking Dead that connected with fans, films in indie genres that carried emotional weight, and commercial/voice work that many heard, some saw, but all felt.
An example of courage under hardship—making public parts of her illness, yet continuing to act, produce, dream projects, staying creatively alive.
The kindness, generosity, and inspiration she brought to sets and collaborations. Many who worked with her speak of her as someone who lifted others, who was present and supportive.
Kelley Mack’s story is one of promise, of rising artistry, of laughter and pain, of brightness that will continue to echo. From childhood commercials to major television roles, from behind-the-camera learning to public visibility, she carved a creative life on her own terms. Though she left sooner than many expected, the impression she made, the roles she played, the people she touched, will continue. She will be remembered not only for what she did, but for how she showed up—with heart, compassion, talent, and courage. Her light may have dimmed, but it shines through others’ memories and through every small creative moment she inspired.
Kelley Lynne Klebenow
Kelley Mack
Female
Cancer
Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.
Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.
Campaigner: Kelley Mack seemed to be a deeply creative and empathetic soul, driven by a love for storytelling and connection, combining courage to take on challenging roles with warmth, sensitivity, and a commitment to her art and those close to her.
Kelley Mack began acting in commercials at a young age and later earned a degree in cinematography from Chapman University in 2014.
She portrayed Addy in Season 9 of The Walking Dead and appeared in shows like Chicago Med and 9-1-1 as well as films like Broadcast Signal Intrusion.
In 2025, she was diagnosed with diffuse midline glioma, a rare brain cancer, and passed away on August 2 at the age of 33.
Mack was also a producer and voice-over artist, contributing to projects including Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse and various commercials.
Kelley Mack received an Acting Award from Tisch School of the Arts and the Student Visionary Award at the Tribeca Film Festival for her breakout performance in The Elephant Garden. She also won Best Leading Actress at the Madrid International Film Festival for her role in Simón. In addition, her short film A Knock at the Door earned a Festival Award at the Atlanta Horror Film Festival.