‘Brat Pack’ director John Hughes dies of heart attack

LOS ANGELES, (Reuters) – Filmmaker John Hughes, who  made some of the most memorable teen comedies of the 1980s and  turned Macaulay Culkin into a major star, died suddenly of a  heart attack in New York yesterday. He was 59.

Hughes, who had largely turned his back on Hollywood in the  past decade to become a farmer in the Midwestern state of  Illinois, collapsed while strolling in Manhattan, where he was  visiting friends.

His films, such as “Sixteen Candles,” “The Breakfast Club”  and “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off,” are considered standard-bearers  of the teen genre, exploring American adolescent behavior with  warmth and affection. He supplied his awkward characters with  natural dialogue, allowing audiences to empathize with their  travails.

Hughes worked with Molly Ringwald on both “Sixteen Candles”  and “The Breakfast Club,” as well as 1986’s “Pretty in Pink,”  which he wrote and produced. He also made a star out of Matthew  Broderick, the fearless hero of “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” who  makes good on his determination to miss a day of school.

“Many filmmakers portray teenagers as immoral and ignorant  with pursuits that are pretty base,” Hughes told the Chicago  Tribune in 1985 as he was about to release “The Breakfast  Club,” his second directing effort.

“They seem to think that teenagers aren’t very bright. But  I haven’t found that to be the case. I listen to kids. I  respect them. I don’t discount anything they have to say just  because they’re only 16 years-old.”