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A shattering reminder of the horrors of war
On the eve of a visit to Iraq, a father and daughter relive the barbarity visited on the country by the West, writes MAYER WAKEFIELD
(L to R) Philip Arditti, Jasmine Naziha Jones, Hayat Kamille, Noof Ousellam, Souad Faress [Helen Murray]

Baghdaddy
Royal Court Downstairs, London SW1W

WITH the acclaimed release of Charlotte Wells’s new movie Aftersun, there is a fresh focus on the underexplored dynamics of father-daughter relationships.

As the title suggests, Jasmine Naziha Jones’s debut, Baghdaddy, explores her experience of that relationship and a lot, lot more besides.   

The show opens with an eight-year-old Darlee, who is also played by Jones, and her dad (the entertaining and versatile Philip Arditti) sat beneath a giant McDonald’s arch — one of many arresting images created by Moi Tran’s arch-laden design.

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