Education
Hatley was educated at Bearwood College, Berkshire and trained in Theatre Design at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London from 1986 to 1989.
Hatley was educated at Bearwood College, Berkshire and trained in Theatre Design at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London from 1986 to 1989.
He has designed for Theatre de Complicite, the Royal Shakespeare Company, the Royal National Theatre, the West End, and Broadway. He has done the costumes and/or scenic design for seven Broadway productions, both musicals and dramas, starting with Stanley in 1997 through Shrek the Musical in 2008. Stage Beauty 2003 (director Richard Eyre) Closer 2004 (director Mike Nichols) Notes on a Scandal 2006 (director Richard Eyre).
Foreign the West End he was costume and set designer for the musical of The Bodyguard (musical), and Simon Gray"s play Quartermaine"s Terms, the original production of Monty Python musical Spamalot (2006) directed by Mike Nichols, having also done the same for Broadway.
He designed sets, costumes and puppets for "Shrek the Musical" (Broadway, West End & United States Tour), sets and costumes for "Betty Blue Eyes" (West End 2011), Private Lives (2001, Noël Coward Theatre) and Humble Boy (2002, Gielgud Theatre). At the National Theatre he has designed over 20 productions, including "Timon of Athens", "Welcome to Thebes", Rafta, Rafta.., Henry V, and Vincent in Brixton.
Endgame in September 2009 (Theatre de Complicite/ West End) and Mrs Klein in October 2009 (Almeida Theatre). In May 2013, the hit musical, The Bodyguard, was staged at London’s Adelphi Theatre, the theme adapted from the 1992 Whitney Houston/Kevin Costner starer celebrated movie, Bodyguard into a stage musical with a cast of Heather Headley as the superstar singer Rachel Marron and Lloyd Owen as Frank Farmer, an ex-Secret Service agent turned bodyguard.
The formidable task fell into the hands of the set and costume designer, Tim Hatley, along with the Director Thea Sharrock, lighting designer Mark Henderson and video designer Duncan McLean and rest of the team
Hatley turned the stage show brilliantly to glide like the real movie. “I think it’s always a tricky thing having a film going onto the stage,” was what Hatley had to say about his work. The whole idea of turning a film into a musical was a big challenge for the reason that he had to keep the audience, already happy with the film, content too, maintaining the film story on one hand and avoiding bringing to stage a carbon copy.
Hatley has proved himself to be a master in story telling, the theatrical way.
Vivienne Westwooda London Fashion, at the Museum of London "Diaghilev and the Golden Age of the Ballet Russes" at "Victoria and Albert Museum".