Disney used an earnings call on Tuesday afternoon to announce the first official details concerning their Frozen musical.

The film-to-stage adaptation is slated for a Broadway opening in 2018, Disney announced today, and an off-Broadway run will take place in a yet-to-be-determined city in 2017.

Surely Disney is hopeful to send the Frozen musical around the country — and the rest of the world — after New York.

The studio also announced the Frozen musical’s creative team today:

– Music and lyrics are by Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez, Frozen’s songwriters who are also responsible for music from Winnie the Pooh, Avenue Q, and Book of Mormon. The songwriting duo are very busy with this project — we learned last year that they’re penning “about a dozen” new songs.

– Story is by Jennifer Lee, who wrote the animated film’s story.

– Directing is Alex Timbers, a Tony Award nominee and Golden Globe winner known for Peter and the Starcatcher and Mozart in the Jungle.

– Choreography will be handled by Peter Darling (Billy Elliot, Matilda)

– Design: Scenes and costumes is by Bob Crowley (Mary Poppins), lighting is by Natasha Katz (Aladdin), sound is by Peter Hylenski, and music will be supervised by Stephen Oremus (Avenue Q, Wicked, Book of Mormon).

Sorry, no cast members were announced today, which means there’s still time to beg Kristen Bell and Idina Menzel to star!

It’s no secret why Disney has put a Frozen musical into development for Broadway. The studio discovered a box office goldmine in Elsa and Ana’s icy world when the movie opened in November 2013. The $1.2 billion global pull has led to a short film, a Disney On Ice production, a forthcoming television special, and a forthcoming sequel (release date TBA).

…Not to mention all of the attention Disney has given Frozen in its merchandise lines and theme parks. Speaking of the latter, a smaller Frozen musical will open at Disneyland’s California Adventure park later this year.

Will you be interested in seeing the ‘Frozen’ musical?

We’re definitely intrigued by the idea of a bunch of new songs. Even though they were overplayed and oversung by kids, they were damn catchy.