The final installment of the 2008 New Original Works Festival ends with a fitting choreographic flourish: a new work by recent Horton Award–winner Rosanna Gamson and her troupe, World Wide. A stint in Poland during a major theater festival triggered Gamson’s reconnection with her Polish-Jewish ancestry, as well as the eclectic theater techniques of Jerzy Grotowsky. Known for deftly weaving dance, spoken word, music and other elements into a distinctive magic-carpet ride, Gamson applies her considerable skills in Tov, which considers the fate of Polish Jewry, almost eradicated by the Holocaust, and the wild tarpan horse, now extinct as a breed but genetically still in existence as a result of crossbreeding with domestic horses. To see video clips on Dance Channel TV, go to www.laweekly.com/stage and click on the Dance pick. Also on the program: Sucktion, by composer Anne LeBaron and writer Douglas Kearney; and Cat Lady, by writer-performer Kristina Wong. REDCAT, 631 W. Second St., dwntwn.; Thurs.-Sat., July 31-Aug. 2, 8:30 p.m.; $18, $14 students. (213) 237-2800.

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