Jennifer: It’s flattering. They’re talking about our film at a deeper level than just it was good, it was bad. And that in itself means a lot. You don’t want to take that away from fans. There is that balance of wanting to stay involved and protecting the characters, certainly going forward, but also liking the world that each person is making.

The one disappointment about Frozen that keeps coming through, certainly in the UK, was that it wasn’t pushed as a film led by two women. We had one movie last year that hit big that was, namely The Heat.

Looking back now, for reasons broader than Disney is your hope that part of the legacy of this is that it’ll give a studio confidence to approach things in a different way? Disney at least tried with The Princess And The Frog, and the marketing here clearly worked.

Jennifer: I will say that I think it’s far more complicated. As a woman, I would love that. But I think that in many ways we have to respect the challenges of getting to a movie-going audience, and the expectation. What I hope Frozen does, really, is show boys that just because it stars two girls, it doesn’t mean don’t go. I think it has: the reaction to them has been great. I think if you create well balanced characters that are well represented, boys and girls relate to them whether they’re boys or girls. I think that’s the direction we’re going on.

I do think it’s a step, but I do think it’s going to take time. It’s one thing to have two female comedians who are very popular, it’s another when you’re trying to reach entire families to try and make everyone feel welcome. We had all the confidence in the world once they’d seen the film, but I think it’s always going to be a challenge. Hopefully one day it won’t be.