The Director And The Pen Pal: Blogger Alison Byrne Fields Remembers John Hughes When she was 15, Alison Byrne Fields became pen pals with director John Hughes. Being friends with a Hollywood bigwig was exciting, but in the wake of Hughes' death at 59, Fields says it was the man behind the movies who moved her.

John Hughes: A Remembrance In Letters

John Hughes: A Remembrance In Letters

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In the '80s, Breakfast Club director John Hughes exchanged letters with teenager Alison Byrne Fields for two years. For her, the correspondence was a source of inspiration and excitement. (Courtesy Alison Byrne Fields) hide caption

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(Courtesy Alison Byrne Fields)

In the '80s, Breakfast Club director John Hughes exchanged letters with teenager Alison Byrne Fields for two years. For her, the correspondence was a source of inspiration and excitement.

(Courtesy Alison Byrne Fields)

Movie director John Hughes, who died suddenly Thursday at age 59, made films that helped teenagers define — and maybe survive — their high school years. One 15-year-old fan was so moved by Hughes' film The Breakfast Club that she wrote a letter to him.

"I kinda spilled my guts to the guy," says Alison Byrne Fields, who grew up to become a diversity educator and social-media strategist. "I just told him that he had touched me, as a teenager who was uncomfortable with being a teenager, uncomfortable with life in general."

A month later, she got a form letter in response — and she got "pretty irate." She let Hughes know it, too, in a follow-up letter, whereupon one of Hollywood's hottest new properties wrote to apologize. That began a pen-pal relationship that lasted for years.

"I think he was sincere about his desire to tell the story of young people in a way that was honest," Byrne Fields says, explaining why she thinks Hughes made the time to keep up their correspondence. "And that having a conversation, a communication with a real young person ... maybe it helped him.

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Read Alison Byrne Fields' blog post:

"He said, 'I make these movies for you,' " she says. "He would laugh at the slang I used, and he would ask me about teachers and talk to me about my relationship with my parents, and so I think that it did inform him. But I like to think he just also cared."

Yesterday, when news broke of Hughes' sudden death from a heart attack, Byrne Fields blogged about those exchanges and about what happened when she and Hughes got back in touch a decade after their initial correspondence had lapsed.

The post became the focus for an outpouring of nostalgia and emotion, both on Facebook and across the Twitterverse. On Friday, Byrne Fields — who works not far from NPR headquarters in Washington, D.C. — visited the studio for a conversation with California-based All Things Considered host Madeleine Brand.

They talked about what she learned as a teen from the man behind some of the most memorable teen-angst comedies of the 1980s — and what he told her, once she had grown up, about the reasons he chose to leave Hollywood behind.