Nathan Barlow has let his hair grow way out.
The actor, who has gone from freckle-faced child performer to lyrical adult before our eyes, now has a Jimi Hendrix-sized 'fro that fits the dream role he is playing in the musical "Passing Strange," which opens Friday at Mixed Blood Theatre in Minneapolis.
The big hair also is about his own coming of age.
"It's kind of rebellion against my mom," said Barlow, who is 22. "She's always on me about cutting my hair. Now, as an adult, I can wear it how I like."
Mom and Dad, both teachers, can rest easy that he didn't get a full-body tattoo or piercings everywhere. Barlow's attitude fits his character in "Passing Strange."
The show, by Stew and Heidi Rodewald, is about a young black musician who travels to Europe to find himself. The Broadway version won a Tony for best book in 2008; Spike Lee made a film of it the following year. At Mixed Blood, Thomas Jones II directs a cast that also includes Jamecia Bennett and Brittany Bradford.
"What I love about this show is that it is a musical but it doesn't sound like other musicals," Barlow said of the funk, gospel, punk and R&B score. "It's not Gershwin, Kander and Ebb and any of that. It speaks to things that are often not the main bread on Broadway."
A 2013 graduate of the University of Minnesota/Guthrie Theater BFA program, Barlow made his professional debut in second grade, when he appeared in the ensemble of the Guthrie's "A Christmas Carol," a show in which he has performed a half-dozen times. He spent more than a decade at Children's Theatre, and has worked on most major stages in the Twin Cities.