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Melissa Lynch, promising and prolific young actress

Melissa Lynch, 27, a prolific stage actress who impressed Philadelphia critics in more than 17 productions, died Thursday, Dec. 30, of injuries from a car wreck.

Melissa Lynch appears with Charlie DelMarcelle in the Lantern Theater Company's production of "Uncle Vanya". (Photo courtesy of Mark Garvin)
Melissa Lynch appears with Charlie DelMarcelle in the Lantern Theater Company's production of "Uncle Vanya". (Photo courtesy of Mark Garvin)Read more

Melissa Lynch, 27, a prolific stage actress who impressed Philadelphia critics in more than 17 productions, died Thursday, Dec. 30, of injuries from a car wreck.

Ms. Lynch most recently appeared in the Lantern Theater Company's production of Chekhov's Uncle Vanya, a performance that Philadelphia Weekly described as "heartbreaking."

The show, which closed in November, capped off a year her colleagues said was the busiest and most successful of her burgeoning career.

"She was booked straight from September 2010 through May 2011 - five or six shows," said Jared Delaney, associate artistic director of the Inis Nua Theatre Company. "They were all high-profile gigs and wildly different types of work."

A Northeast Philadelphia native who lived in Mayfair, Ms. Lynch discovered her love for the stage as a preteen, when she saw an ad announcing auditions for a community theater.

"She said, 'Daddy, this is what I want to do,' and dragged my father by the coat sleeves to take her," said her sister Theresa.

Melissa Lynch went on to star in several musicals while a student at St. Hubert's Catholic High School for Girls and acted in 25 productions while studying acting at Clarion University. There, she was nominated four times for the American College Theater Festival's Irene Ryan scholarship.

After debuting on the Philadelphia theater scene in 2005, she appeared on stages with companies including Azuka Theatre, the Philadelphia Shakespeare Festival, and the Philadelphia Artist Collective. Even her smallest performances garnered accolades, colleagues said.

"Her ability to capture an audience in a moment is stunning. Her range as an actress is as effortless as her singing voice," the Philadelphia Theatre Review wrote of her role in a 2006 production of Agnes of God at the Walnut Street Theatre.

Ms. Lynch also juggled work managing the Cherry Hill office of her brother Michael's business, Catering by Miles. She was en route home when the accident occurred, in Philadelphia near the Tacony-Palmyra Bridge.

In addition to her brother and sister, she is survived by her father, Michael; her mother, Madeline McCarthy; brothers Joseph and Ian; sister Tina; and her fiancé, William Seiler. She and Seiler planned to wed in June. Even during wedding planning, she never missed a rehearsal, Theresa Lynch said.

"No matter what else was going on in her life, she would always get her cup of tea and head to the theater," she said. "She had a vision. She had a passion. Acting was her art."

A viewing is set for 6 to 9 p.m. Monday, Jan. 3, at Wetzel & Son Funeral Home, 419 Huntingdon Pike, Rockledge. A Funeral Mass is scheduled for 11:15 a.m. Tuesday, Jan. 4, at St. Matthew Catholic Church, 3000 Cottman Ave.