
Age: 61
female
Kimberly Jan Dickens (born June 18, 1965) is an American actress. Her film debut was in the 1995 comedy film Palookaville. Dickens played lead roles in the films Truth or Consequences, N.M. (1997), Zero Effect (1998) and Mercury Rising (1998). Her other films include Great Expectations (1998), Hollow Man (2000), House of Sand and Fog (2003), Thank You for Smoking (2005), The Blind Side (2009), Gone Girl (2014), Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children (2016), Lizzie (2018), Land (2021), and The Good Nurse (2022). On television, Dickens had regular roles in the drama series Deadwood (2004–2006; 2019), Treme (2010–2013), and House of Cards (2015–2017). She stars as Madison Clark in the AMC horror drama series Fear the Walking Dead (2015–2018; 2022–present).

Mara Blake (Jessica Rothe) is an audio archivist with a glitch in her reality: when she touches someone, she hears the future—fractured soundscapes, neon visions, and emotional echoes that make no sense until they matter most. Her older sister Eliza (the hyper-organized genius with a secret past) has spent years trying to contain Mara’s chaos, ever since a childhood incident cracked time wide open. But when rogue sonic engineer Dr. Voss begins weaponizing sound itself—turning frequencies into mind-altering tech—Mara is forced to team up with her ex-partner Cass “Loop” Virelli (also Kaley Cuoco), a pirate broadcaster who thrives on glitchy rebellion. Alongside Zoey, a high school prodigy whose feral inventions somehow work, and Milo, the dry-witted realist immune to Mara’s touch, they form a crew of misfits trying to decode the pulse that links them all to the future. Together, they stumble through frequency heists, sonic wormholes, and emotional rewinds, discovering that their family’s connection to time and sound runs deeper than they ever imagined. As reality begins to skip like a broken mixtape, Mara must learn to dance with chaos instead of fighting it—before the future rewrites them all. Touchwave is a genre-bending sci-fi comedy about sisterhood, second chances, and the strange music of time. Think Russian Doll meets Scott Pilgrim with a splash of Eternal Sunshine—where every mistake echoes louder, and every glitch is a clue.
