With about two years left to go until the much-anticipated Broadway launch of “Frozen,” those eager to “Let It Go” can get a chill fix with a 55-minute live version that had its world premiere on the Disney Wonder cruise ship as it relaunched from its major refit last week.

With a theater now kitted out in state-of-the-art sound and visual trickery, “Frozen, a Musical Spectacular” brings a new level to cruise shows with a performance that is truly Broadway caliber.

The elaborate spectacle was created by an award-winning team led by Disney’s creative executive Kevin Eld. He turned to director Sheryl Kaller (“Mothers and Sons”) to create a multilayered extravaganza aimed at staying true to the movie while bringing to life the fanciful elements of the beloved tale.

Clever puppetry and visuals start the show and give comic roles to Olaf the snowman and Sven the reindeer courtesy of designer Michael Curry (Broadway’s “The Lion King”). Josh Prince (“Beautiful”) employs inventive choreography to advance the plot while evoking classic Broadway and Busby Berkeley-style routines.

New technology involving advanced motion-tracking video layers in Elsa’s dramatic ice-forming talents, although the effects “augment the show, [they don’t] lead it,” according to Jim Urry, vice president of entertainment at Disney Cruise Line.

To underscore that, the show’s highlight — Elsa’s iconic transformation scene — is aided by some costuming trickery provided by Paloma Young (“Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812”) with an evolving dress described by Kaller as “the best costume design seen ever.” Cheers for the climactic scene, where Elsa literally lets her hair down, certainly raised the roof.

The show, which has been two years in the making, involved collaborations with the film’s original talent, including the movie’s producer John Lasseter and songwriters Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez.

In a division of church and state, the upcoming Broadway two-act musical is a separate being. Yet, much like when “Aladdin” made the jump to light speed on Broadway in 2014, the creativity and problem-solving involved in bringing a much-loved Disney film — in this case the most successful animated movie ever — to a 977-seater theater at sea likely won’t go unheeded. Plus, with an audience made up of cosplaying girls who know the story, lines, songs and nuances upside down and inside out, the bar is set high with “Frozen, a Musical Spectacular.”

Kaller credits the “feminist story” for its popularity with girls while realizing the pressure of that fan frenzy.

“In the end, we trusted our hearts in bringing this story to life,” she says.

“Frozen, a Musical Spectacular” features on the Disney Wonder, which sails from Galveston, Texas. For more info: DisneyCruise.com