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Therefore, details such as "Lea Thompson later married director HowardDeutch", or "Chynna Phillips was in the group Wilson Phillips" we don't consider to be relevant.
HowardDeutch (who replaced Martha Coolidge as director), was ultimately given this movie as a gift.
However, after his box office success of 1986, John Hughes conceded that HowardDeutch was correct to shoot the alternative ending of Pretty in Pink (Andy with Blane), rather than try and find a way of getting the original version to work (Andy with Duckie).
Feature and TV director HowardDeutch, the only son of music publishing wiz Murray Deutch, began his career in the advertising department of United Artists Records (where his father was company president) prior to going into business for himself.
Deutch followed with the Macauley Culkin-Ted Danson vehicle, "Getting Even with Dad" (1994), which failed to touch many paying customers, but he rebounded nicely with the predictable but popular sequel "Grumpier Old Men" (1995), with Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau.
Deutch met his wife Lea Thompson on the set of "Some Kind of Wonderful" and subsequently directed her in "Only Sin Deep" (1989), his first "Tales from the Crypt" effort, "Article 99" and episodes of her popular NBC series "Caroline in the City".