The Secret World of Alex Mack is an Americantelevision series that ran on Nickelodeon from October 8, 1994 to January 15, 1998, replacing Clarissa Explains It All on the SNICK line-up.[1][2] It also aired on YTV in Canada, Channel 4 in the United Kingdom and NHK in Japan, and was a staple in the children's weekday line-up for much of the mid-to-late 1990s on the ABC in Australia. Repeats of the series aired in 2003 on The N, but it was soon replaced there. The series was produced by Thomas Lynch and John Lynch of Lynch Entertainment, produced by RHI Entertainment, Hallmark Entertainment, and Nickelodeon Productions, and was co-created by Tom Lynch and Ken Lipman.
The body of a worker was recovered while two other employees remained missing on Saturday after an explosion at a silicone plant in a Chicago suburb, a fire official said. Annie Mack must find out why her sister Alex is keeping secrets from her related to her horrible experience with the GC Divide chemical compound. Rated: T - English - Sci-Fi/Adventure - Chapters: 3 - Words: 6,829 - Reviews: 30 - Favs: 6 - Follows: 7 - Updated: 2/15/2005 - Published: 8/11/2001. An essential oil is a concentrated hydrophobic liquid containing volatile (easily evaporated at normal temperatures) chemical compounds from plants.Essential oils are also known as volatile oils, ethereal oils, aetherolea, or simply as the oil of the plant from which they were extracted, such as oil of clove.An essential oil is 'essential' in the sense that it contains the 'essence of' the.
Plot[edit]
Alex Mack is an ordinary teenage girl, living with her parents, George and Barbara, and older sister, Annie, in the town of Paradise Valley, Arizona. While walking home after her first day of junior high school, she is nearly hit by a truck from a chemical plant, and during the incident, she is accidentally drenched with a top secret chemical called GC-161. She soon discovers that it has given her strange powers, such as telekinesis, shooting electricity from her fingers, and the ability to dissolve into a mobile puddle of water. However, her powers prove to be unpredictable (such as when her skin starts glowing brightly when she is nervous). She confides only in Annie and her best friend Ray, choosing to keep her powers a secret from everyone else, including her parents, for fear of what the chemical plant CEO, Danielle Atron, will do to her if she finds out.
Characters[edit]
Main[edit]
Alexandra 'Alex' Mack (played by Larisa Oleynik) - Alex is an average teenager in Paradise Valley. While walking home from school, she is nearly hit by a truck carrying GC-161 and is doused with it, thus; giving her extraordinary powers.[3][4][5][6] Among them are telekinesis, the ability to generate electricity from her hands and the ability to liquify/travel from place to place in the form of a puddle of water.
Raymond 'Ray' Alvarado (played by Darris Love) – Alex's best friend and next door neighbor, and the only one besides Annie to know about Alex's powers.
Annie Mack (played by Meredith Bishop) – Alex's older sister, and a scientific genius in her own right. Next to Ray, she is the only one who originally knows about Alex's powers.[7] She administers various scientific tests to ensure Alex's safety. She also hopes to one day present her research, in an effort to stop Danielle Atron.
George Mack (played by Michael Blakley) – Annie and Alex's father. He is a brilliant chemist who works for Danielle Atron at the Paradise Valley Chemical Plant.
Barbara Mack (played by Dorian Lopinto) – Annie and Alex's mother. She is a more down-to-earth woman who works in a public relations firm.
Recurring[edit]
Louis Driscoll (played by Benjamin Kimball Smith) – Alex and Ray's abrasive friend. At first Alex is jealous of Louis, but they eventually become friends.
David 'Dave' Watt (played by John Nielsen) – The dim witted truck driver who was driving the truck that accidentally dumped the GC-161 chemical on Alex. As the only witness to the accident, Dave is often forced to serve as a partner to Vince Carter (see below) in trying to capture Alex. After seeing Alex using her powers while she was in high school, Dave keeps it a secret from Danielle to protect her as he knew what kind of horrible experiments Danielle had planned for her.
Scott Greene (played by Jason Strickland) – Alex's junior high crush.
Jessica (played by Jessica Alba) – Scott's first girlfriend and Alex's first school rival.
Kelly Phillips (played by Hilary Salvatore) – Scott's second girlfriend and Alex's second school rival. Kelly deviously discredits Alex at every given turn, much to Alex's dismay.
Robyn Russo (played by Natanya Ross) – One of Alex and Ray's neighborhood friends. Though she possesses a sardonic sense of humor and is fun to be around, she suffers from low self-esteem.
Nicole Wilson (played by Alexis Fields) – Another of Alex and Ray's friends. An opposite personality to Robyn, has a take-charge attitude and strong-willed demeanor.
Danielle Atron (played by Louan Gideon) – The owner/CEO of the Paradise Valley Chemical Plant who is the main antagonist of the series. She wants to market GC-161 as a radical new weight-loss drug, and has made it her mission to find the GC-161 child (who she does not know is Alex) and capture her, as both a test subject and a threat to the secrecy of her plans.
Vincent 'Vince' Carter (played by John Marzilli) – The maniacal head of security at the Paradise Valley Chemical Plant, he makes it his obsession to find the GC-161 child (even after he gets fired from the Plant).
Lars Frederickson (played by Kevin Quigley) – A skilled chemist hailing from the Paradise Valley Chemical Plant's foreign branch in Vienna. He becomes Danielle Atron's chief subordinate after Vince gets fired. He is named after one of the members of punk rock group Rancid.
Hunter Reeves (played by Will Estes) – Hunter comes to Paradise Valley with an agenda concerning the disappearance of his father in relation to GC-161.
Episodes[edit]
Season
Episodes
Originally aired
First aired
Last aired
1
13
October 8, 1994
February 4, 1995
2
20
October 14, 1995
September 28, 1996
3
25
October 5, 1996
March 4, 1997
4
20
September 23, 1997
January 15, 1998
Filming locations[edit]
The series was filmed in Valencia, California and the Santa Clarita Valley. The Mack home and Paradise Valley Chemical Plant interiors were filmed in a converted warehouse used as a soundstage. The junior high scenes were filmed at Charles Helmers and James Foster Elementary Schools. Create startup disk mac. Castaic Middle School was used for senior high scenes.[8] The house, used for exterior shots, is located in the Westford Place neighborhood of Valencia.
Availability[edit]
Alex Mac Chemical Plant Wallpaper
The show's first season (consisting of 13 episodes on two discs) was released by Genius Entertainment on DVD format on October 2, 2007.[9] The set is noteworthy for giving Jessica Alba top billing on the package, most likely in an effort to sell more copies, even though she actually only appears in a supporting role, and only in a few episodes. This was then released in Region 2 on April 2, 2012 and in Region 4 on June 6, 2012.
The first and second seasons are available through Amazon.com's Instant Video section and through iTunes. Episodes of the series have been seen on a sporadic basis on TeenNick's 1990s-oriented block, The '90s Are All That.
Mill Creek Entertainment released the complete series on DVD for the very first time on August 1, 2017.[10]
Book series[edit]
Alex Mac Chemical Plant Pictures
A book series aimed at young readers was released along with the series. The first and last books of the series were novelizations of the first and last episodes, respectively. The rest of the series consisted of completely original stories, tied into the main series through the mentioning of various plot points from the TV episodes.
References[edit]
^'SHOWS FOR YOUNGSTERS AND THEIR PARENTS TOO : Larisa Oleynik finds the secret is to have fun as 'Alex Mack''. The Los Angeles Times. 1994-10-02. Retrieved 2010-08-24.
^Mangan, Jennifer (1994-10-05). 'Magic `Mack''. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2010-08-30.
^'Morphing Magic'. Sun Sentinel. 1996-08-03. Retrieved 2010-08-30.
^'`Alex Mack' Star Just An Ordinary Teen'. Chicago Tribune. 1995-10-19. Retrieved 2010-11-09.
^'Zap! You're Famous; Tv Show Turns Actress Into A Star'. Chicago Tribune. 1995-08-01. Retrieved 2010-11-09.
^'Mack Attack For The Star Of The Secret World Of Alex Mack, Life Is More Than Being A Puddle Of Goo'. Sun Sentinel. 1995-08-22. Retrieved 2010-11-09.
^'Morphing Teen Plays To Kids' Fantasies In `Alex Mack''. Chicago Tribune. 1996-06-10. Retrieved 2010-08-30.
^Schubert, Mary. 'NICKELODEON SHOW `ALEX MACK' FEELS RIGHT AT HOME'. The Los Angeles Daily News. March 23, 1997, accessed March 15, 2011.
^'Secret World of Alex Mack - Season 1'. DVD Talk. Retrieved 2011-01-30.
^'The Secret World of Alex Mack - SCOOP: Press Release Announces 'The Complete Series' on DVD!'. TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on June 8, 2017. Retrieved June 6, 2017.
External links[edit]
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Alex Mac Chemical Plant Images
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