Thanks, Ynon. As Ynon said, our first quarter results were negatively impacted by movements in retail inventory levels. The first quarter's decline was primarily due to the negative impact from retailers of managing inventory levels, which were elevated entering the year and also due to the comparison to the year-ago quarter, which benefited from retailers building earlier in the season. First quarter results were slightly ahead of the outlook we provided in mid-March, driven by the favorable timing of shipments at quarter-end. Net sales of $815 million declined 22% or 21% in constant-currency, compared to the prior year. However, we saw positive POS performance in both absolute and relative terms, which grew mid-single-digits in the quarter and significantly outpaced gross billings. Mattel outperformed the industry and gained market share. As a reminder, POS and consumer demand exclude the impact related to our Russia business. Adjusted gross margin declined 660 basis-points to 40%, due to several factors, including inventory management costs and the negative scale impact associated with the sales decline. Adjusted operating income declined by $177 million to a negative $87 million, primarily due to the lower sales and lower adjusted gross margin. Adjusted EPS was a negative $0.24 compared to a positive $0.08 a year-ago and adjusted EBITDA declined by $166 million to a negative $14 million. We expect consumer demand to be positive for the full-year and revenue comparisons to improve through the year as shipping patterns revert to historical trends in the second-half. Turning to gross billings in constant-currency, performance across categories was primarily impacted by movements in retailer inventory levels that had an outsized impact on a seasonally small quarter, while gross billings declined 21%, including a negative 3 point impact from Russia. It was overall positive consumer demand for our products as POS increased mid-single-digits. Dolls declined 22%, primarily due to declines in Barbie, partly offset by growth in Monster High and Disney Princess and Frozen. POS for dolls increased low-single-digits. Barbie POS was down high-single-digits, but significantly better than shipping, which declined 40%. POS and shipping for Barbie were also impacted by the shift of promotions into Q2 to better align with the theatrical release of the movie. Mattel gained over 350 basis-points of market share in the Dolls category in Q1 and Barbie was the number-one doll property globally per Circana. Vehicles grew 1% with POS up low-double-digits. Growth was primarily driven by Hot Wheels, die-cast Vehicles. Mattel gained over 530 basis-points of market share in the vehicle's category achieving the highest Q1 market-share on record per Circana. Infant, toddler and preschool declined 26%, while POS was down low-double-digits. POS declines in baby gear as we optimize the offering, were partly offset by growth in Little People and Imaginext. Mattel was the number one toy company globally in the Infant, toddler, preschool category and gained 60 basis-points of market-share in the quarter per Circana. Challenger categories in aggregate declined 38% primarily due to lower sales in Action Figures as we lap the theatrical tie-ins in the prior year. POS was up low-double-digits. With respect to regional performance, North America declined to 27% reflecting the retail inventory headwinds. POS was flat, compared to last year per Circana. Mattel gained market-share in North America in Q1. EMEA declined 24%, including a negative 12-point impact from Russia and also reflecting the retail inventory headwinds. POS increased double-digits. Latin America grew 1%. POS increased double-digits. Per Circana, Mattel gained market-share in Latin America in Q1, extending our number one market position. Asia-Pacific increased 17%, driven by growth in all key markets. POS declined mid-single-digits, primarily due to China. As previously noted, retail inventory levels at year-end were above the prior year and elevated heading into 2023. This position improved in the first quarter with levels ending slightly below the prior year in both dollars and weeks of supply. While improved, quarter-end retail inventories remain slightly elevated, which is expected to negatively impact our second quarter gross billings as retailers continue to adjust their position. Adjusted gross margin declined 660 basis points to 40% in the quarter. The decline was due to several factors, inventory management, primarily closeout sales and obsolescence of 420 basis points, cost inflation of 210 basis points, fixed-cost absorption of 140 basis-points associated with lower-volume and mix and other factors of 140 basis-points. These negative factors were partly offset by price increases, primarily the carryover benefit from 2022 actions, which contributed 120 basis-points and savings from the optimizing for growth program, which had a positive impact of 120 basis points. Moving down the P&L, advertising expenses increased 3% to $76 million, supporting POS growth in the quarter. Adjusted SG&A increased 5% to $336 million, primarily due to market related pay increases partly offset by savings from the optimizing for growth program. Adjusted operating income was a negative $87 million, compared to a positive $90 million a year-ago. The decline was due to lower sales and lower adjusted gross margin. Adjusted EBITDA declined by $166 million to a negative $14 million impacted by the same factors. Cash from operations was a use of $206 million, reflecting the seasonality of the business, compared to a use of $144 million in the prior year. The increased use of cash was due to lower net earnings, partly offset by reduced working capital requirements. Capital expenditures were $43 million, compared to $36 million a year-ago and free-cash flow was a use of $249 million, compared to a use of $180 million in the first quarter of 2022. On a trailing 12-month basis, we generated $187 million in free cash flow, compared to $226 million in the prior year. The decline was primarily due to capital expenditures, which increased $42 million to $193 million. With positive free-cash flow, a strong financial position and confidence in our outlook, we have resumed share repurchases. In the first quarter, we repurchased $34 million of our shares and look to continue repurchases in 2023. Taking a look at the balance sheet, we finished the quarter with a cash balance of $462 million, compared to $537 million in the prior year. The decline reflects the use of cash to reduce debt and repurchase shares, mostly offset by free-cash flow generated over the trailing 12-months. Total debt declined to $2,327 million from $2,572 million last year reflecting the repayment of $250 million of debt in the fourth quarter last year. Accounts receivable declined by $188 million to $674 million in line with the decline in sales. Inventory was $961 million, slightly down from the prior year of $969 million as we have continued to achieve sequential improvements in year-over-year levels. Looking ahead, we believe we are well-positioned to achieve inventory reductions in 2023, which will contribute to free cash flow generation. Leverage ratio increased to 2.9 times at the end of the first quarter, compared to 2.4 times a year-ago. The increase is primarily due to the timing of our quarterly results. We expect to end 2023 with a leverage ratio of approximately 2.5 times. We generated $21 million of savings in the quarter as we continue to execute the optimizing for growth program launched in 2021. As previously announced, we raised our program saving's goal to $300 million by 2023. And we are confident that we will achieve that target. We expect incremental savings of $96 million in 2023. We now expect total estimated cash expenditures to implement the program to be $155 million to $185 million, a slight increase from our prior estimate. We are reiterating our full-year 2023 guidance consistent with our February Investor presentation. This includes our expectation for net sales to be comparable to last year in constant currency, adjusted EPS in the range of $1.10 to $1.20, adjusted EBITDA of $900 million to $950 million and for free-cash flow to exceed $400 million. In terms of phasing, we expect gross billings in the second quarter to be negatively impacted by retailers continuing to manage their inventory and for shipments in the second-half to revert to historical trends. This will result in an accelerated growth rate, particularly in Q4 as we wrap an atypical inventory decline in the prior year. We are operating in a challenging macroeconomic environment with higher volatility that may impact consumer demand. The guidance considers what the company is aware of today, but remains subject to further market volatility, any unexpected disruption and other macroeconomic risks and uncertainties. In closing, we're off to a good start with overall growth in consumer demand for our product and market-share gains and believe we are well-positioned to achieve our full-year guidance. And now I will turn it over to the operator.