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Teen hits also included âFerris Buellerâs Day Offâ and âSixteen Candlesâ
NEW YORK - Writer-director John Hughes, Hollywoodâs youth impresario of the 1980s and â90s who captured the teen and preteen market with such favorites as âHome Alone,â âThe Breakfast Clubâ and âFerris Buellerâs Day Off,â died Thursday, a spokeswoman said. He was 59.
Hughes died of a heart attack during a morning walk in Manhattan, Michelle Bega said. He was in New York to visit family.
Jake Bloom, Hughesâ longtime attorney, said he was âdeeply saddened and in shockâ to learn of the directorâs death.
A native of Lansing, Mich., who later moved to suburban Chicago and set much of his work there, Hughes rose from ad writer to comedy writer to silver screen champ with his affectionate and idealized portraits of teens, whether the romantic and sexual insecurity of âSixteen Candles,â or the J.D. Salinger-esque rebellion against conformity in âThe Breakfast Club.â
Hughesâ ensemble comedies helped make stars out of Molly Ringwald, Anthony Michael Hall, Ally Sheedy and many other young performers. He also scripted the phenomenally popular âHome Alone,â which made little-known Macaulay Culkin a sensation as the 8-year-old accidentally abandoned by his vacationing family, and wrote or directed such hits as âNational Lampoonâs Vacation,â âPretty in Pink,â âPlanes, Trains & Automobilesâ and âUncle Buck.â
âI was a fan of both his work and a fan of him as a person,â Culkin said. âThe world has lost not only a quintessential filmmaker whose influence will be felt for generations, but a great and decent man.â
Devin Ratray, best known for playing Culkinâs older brother Buzz McCallister in the âHome Aloneâ films, said he remained close to Hughes over the years.
âHe changed my life forever,â Ratray said. âNineteen years later, people from all over the world contact me telling me how much âHome Aloneâ meant to them, their families, and their children.â
Steve Martin played lead character Neal Page in the 1987 hit âPlanes, Trains & Automobiles.â
âJohn Hughes was a great director, but his gift was in screenwriting,â Martin said. âHe created deep and complex characters, rich in humanity and humor.â
Other actors who got early breaks from Hughes included John Cusack (âSixteen Candlesâ), Judd Nelson (âThe Breakfast Clubâ), Steve Carell (âCurly Sueâ) and Lili Taylor (âSheâs Having a Babyâ).
Actor Matthew Broderick worked with Hughes in 1986 when he played the title character in âFerris Buellerâs Day Off.â
âI am truly shocked and saddened by the news about my old friend John Hughes. He was a wonderful, very talented guy and my heart goes out to his family,â Broderick said.
Ben Stein, who played the monotone economics teacher calling the roll and repeatedly saying âBueller? Bueller? Bueller?â, said Hughes was a towering talent.
âHe made a better connection with young people than anyone in Hollywood had ever made before or since,â Stein said on Fox Business Network. âItâs incredibly sad. He was a wonderful man, a genius, a poet. I donât think anyone has come close to him as being the poet of the youth of America in the postwar period. He was to them what Shakespeare was to the Elizabethan Age.
âYou had a regular guy â just an ordinary guy. If you met him, you would never guess he was a big Hollywood power.â
As Hughes advanced into middle age, his commercial touch faded and, in Salinger style, he increasingly withdrew from public life. His last directing credit was in 1991, for âCurly Sue,â and he wrote just a handful of scripts over the past decade. He was rarely interviewed or photographed.
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