Thank you, Mary. Today, I will cover our operating and financial performance in the quarter, along with an update on our capital markets activities and outlook. Turning first to the results for the quarter on Slide 9. We have now installed over 102,000 solar and storage systems with storage attachment rates reaching 50% of installations nationally during the first quarter of 2024. We expect storage attachment rates to remain around this level throughout the remainder of the year. This higher mix of storage has driven improvements to our net subscriber value as backup storage offerings carry higher margins. During the quarter, we installed 207-megawatt hours of storage capacity, well above the high end of our guidance and almost triple the same quarter last year. Our total network storage capacity is now over 1.5 gigawatt hours. In the first quarter, solar energy capacity installed was approximately 177 megawatts, also above the high end of our guidance range of 165 to 175 megawatts. Customer additions were approximately 24,000, including approximately 22,000 subscriber additions. Our subscription mix reached 93% of deployments in the period, an increase of 92% -- from 92% last quarter and the highest level in many years. We ended Q1 with approximately 957,000 customers and 803,000 subscribers representing 6.9 gigawatts of network solar energy capacity, a 16% increase year-over-year. Our subscribers generate significant recurring revenue with most under 20- or 25-year contracts for the clean energy we provide. At the end of Q1, our annual recurring revenue, or ARR, stood at over $1.4 billion, up 30% over the same period last year. We had an average contract life remaining of nearly 18 years. Turning to Slide 10. In Q1, subscriber value was approximately $50,800, and creation cost was approximately $38,900, delivering a net subscriber value of $11,891. This strong result was from increased efficiency and a beat on volumes. Our Q1 subscriber value and net subscriber value now reflect a blended investment tax credit of over 35% benefiting from expanded eligibility for the Energy Community's ITC adder and the portion of our deployed systems eligible for the low-income adder. Total value generated which is the net subscriber value multiplied by the number of subscriber additions in the period was $262 million in the first quarter. Our present value-based metrics are presented using a 6% discount rate, but our financial underwriting already accounts for our current cost of capital, which was in the 7.6% area in Q1. As a reminder, to enable ease of comparison across periods, we generally do not update the discount rate frequently. Instead, we provide advanced rate ranges that reflect current interest rates enabling investors to calculate the obtainable net cash unit margins on our deployments. In addition, we provide a pro forma net subscriber value using the capital costs observed for the quarter. At a 7.6% discount rate, net subscriber value was $6,593 and total value generated was $145 million. We expect additional tailwinds to net subscriber value in future periods from the following variety of factors: more favorable business mix, increased realization of ITC adders and lower costs from hardware price reductions, labor efficiency and operating leverage from strong sequential volume growth. On Slide 11, we detailed the tailwinds from ITC adders and hardware costs. In Q1, we recognized a weighted average ITC of approximately 35%, the equivalent of approximately half of our systems qualifying for the energy communities or low-income adder. During the quarter, the government expanded the qualification criteria for the energy communities adder. Approximately 35% of our current installation is now qualified compared to 13% before the expansion. While the energy community adder expansion was favorable, our expectation for the portion of our systems that qualify for the low-income adder going forward has been lowered from 26% to 18% given the current inefficiencies in the program design and implementation. While we continue to receive proceeds from the energy communities adders, proceeds from the awarded low-income adders are delayed given the slow government process. Proceeds from domestic content adders are expected to be realized in the coming quarters. Guidance on what will qualify for the domestic content adder has been issued but we are still awaiting further clarity from additional rule-making processes sometime this year. Combined, these adders could represent up to $450 million or more in additional annual run rate cash proceeds. We continue to see decreasing prices for key hardware components, which are gradually flowing through our reported costs as we finish consuming our higher cost inventory. On a like-for-like basis, for a 7.5 kilowatt solar with backup battery system, by the end of this year, hardware costs are expected to decline by over 18% or nearly $2,500 per system from their peak in the second quarter of 2023. These beneficial trends may be obscured by an increasing mix of storage, which carries higher net margins but will increase hardware and install costs and therefore, increase creation costs. Additionally, we are monitoring recent developments with certain U.S. manufacturers petitioning for new tariffs. Modules, however, represent less than 10% of our total creation costs and the history of various trade disputes has demonstrated the impact has been manageable as global supply chain is dynamic over time. Turning now to gross and net earning assets and our balance sheet on Slide 13. Gross earning assets were $15 billion at the end of the first quarter. Gross earning assets is the measure of cash flows we expect to receive from subscribers over time, net of operating and maintenance costs, distributions to tax equity partners and partnership flip structures, and distributions to project equity financing partners all discounted at a 6% unlevered capital cost. Net earning assets were $5.2 billion at the end of the first quarter, up approximately $200 million from the prior quarter. Net earning assets is gross earning assets plus cash less all debt. Net earning assets doesn't include inventory or other construction and progress assets or net derivative assets related to our interest rate swaps, all of which represent additional value. The value creation upside we expect from future grid services opportunities and selling additional electrification products and services to our customer base, including our storage retrofit offering, are not reflected in these metrics. We programmatically enter into interest rate hedges to insulate our capital costs from adverse near-term fluctuations. The vast majority of our debt is either fixed coupon long-dated securities, or floating rate loans that have been hedged with interest rate swaps. As such, we do not adjust the discount rate used in net earning assets to match current capital costs for new installations. We ended the quarter with $783 million in total cash, a decrease of $205 million compared to the prior quarter. Q1, which is typically the weakest quarter for cash generation due to volume seasonality, was further impacted by onetime costs from financing activities we completed in the quarter, as we discussed on last quarter's call, as well as delayed timing of incentive monetization. Cash generation was negative $311 million in Q1, which included approximately $317 million of onetime costs and timing-related items as we have outlined on Slide 14. Excluding these items, adjusted cash generation was positive $6 million in the quarter. The financing activities we opted to pursue in Q1 resulted in $107 million of onetime cash impact. These included fees paid for the 2030 convertible debt issuance and purchase of the cap call to mitigate dilution, fees paid on the extension of our recourse working capital facility and fees paid on the extension of our nonrecourse warehouse facility and an associated reduction to the facility's advance rate. In Q1, we made a significant transition from traditional tax equity where all cash is typically provided at or just before installations to tax credit transfer where funds for tax credits often come quarterly in arrears. This transition was primarily responsible for a reduction in Q1 tax equity proceeds of approximately $181 million. We are working to close new funding that will resolve the working capital headwind, all of which we expect to close before the end of the quarter. With these closings, we will fully recover the working capital investment that we made in Q1. In Q1, we deployed systems that are expected to contribute $30 million in cash generation from the low-income ITC adder. While many systems have met all conditions, monetization remains delayed given the timing of government processes. Later this quarter, we are expecting to monetize the receipt of delayed ITC adders through a combination of additional tax equity funding and debt proceeds. Turning to our capital markets activity. As we discussed last call, we were very active in Q1 arranging capital to support our growth and further optimize our balance sheet by extending maturities. It is prudent to extend facilities early to navigate potential and unexpected macroeconomic conditions and volatility. In February, we successfully extended and upsized our nonrecourse revolving senior warehouse facility to support our scale. This facility funds assets temporarily before we raise long-term financing, principally in the asset-backed securitization market. We increased the size by $550 million up from $1.8 billion to $2.35 billion and extended the maturity by approximately 3 years from April 2025 to February 2028. The effective credit spreads increase of 50 basis points was commensurate with recent movements in the securitization market for term out transactions with similar advance rates. The facility continues to have a diversified set of 9 relationship lenders. We also achieved certain other improved terms that afford more flexibility to fund our anticipated future products and geographic mix. Our team also continues to execute tax equity transactions including structures that facilitate ITC transfers to a deepening pool of large buyers. As we discussed on the last few calls, the traditional tax equity market has been tighter recently which we believe is resolving now that tax equity investors have adapted their approaches to structuring deals in this new environment. In addition, we continue to build an active pipeline to sell tax credits to corporate buyers for ITCs that are generated when systems are placed into service. As of today, closed transactions and executed term sheets provide us with expected tax equity capacity to fund over 331 megawatts of projects or subscribers beyond what was deployed through the first quarter. We expect to expand this runway during Q2. Sunrun also had $593 million in unused commitments available on its nonrecourse senior revolving warehouse loans at the end of the quarter. This unused amount would fund approximately 214 megawatts of projects for subscribers. Our strong debt capital runway allows us to be selective in timing transactions. Since the start of the year, we have closed 2 ABS transactions. Sunrun's industry-leading performance as an originator and servicer of residential solar assets continues to provide deep access to attractively priced capital. In February, we closed an ABS transaction with a private credit investor and arranged subordinated debt financing on the portfolio. The $361 million nonrecourse senior debt was rated A-by Kroll and was priced with a 232.5 basis points spread. This demonstrated yet another improvement in capital costs, with spreads declining from our last securitization in September that was priced with a 240 basis point spread. We placed a $109 million subordinated loan on the portfolio as well. The all-in full stack weighted average cost of capital on this portfolio was approximately 7.5% and resulted in accumulative advance rate as measured against our contracted subscriber value metric of over 80%. The use of private credit investors shows the strong interest in our assets from a growing and broad set of investors. In April, we closed a $230 million securitization to refinance existing debt on a portfolio of seasoned assets. The nonrecourse senior debt was rated A by Kroll and was priced at a credit spread of 195 basis points, a 37.5 basis point improvement from our private securitization in February and 45 basis points lower than our securitization in September 2023. The latest execution represents the lowest spread achieved for similarly rated transactions across the sector since 2021. The portfolio is jointly owned by National Grid and Sunrun following their project equity investment in 2017. With National Grid receiving the majority of cash flows through 2042, including the significant net cash proceeds from this refinancing. Importantly, however, this transaction highlights our continued deep access to capital at improving terms and demonstrates the favorable market for refinancing seasoned assets we have originated and serviced. This bodes well for the significantly sized portfolios of seasoned assets that we will refinance in the coming years. Moving to the parent capital side. During Q1, we took actions to extend maturities and optimize our current balance sheet. In February, we closed an extension of our recourse working capital facility. We reduced the size from $600 million to $447.5 million with an option to upsize the facility to $477.5 million, prior to September 30, 2024. We amended the facility to extend the maturity from January 2025 to November 2025. We also included a feature that will further extend the maturity to March 2027 should we meet the requirements for this provision, which include addressing the maturity of the convertible notes due in February 2026. Also in February, we issued $483 million in convertible notes due in 2030. Since the issuance of the 2030 convertible notes, we have repurchased another $82 million of our 2026 convertible notes. To date, we have now spent $175 million to repurchase over $205 million of these notes. Less than half of the 2026 notes now remain outstanding. We will continue to be disciplined and selective with repurchases, given alternative high-yielding capital uses. Our intent is to maintain a strong and healthy balance sheet. The recourse financing and bond repurchase activity in Q1, including all related fees, increased our cash by $102 million and increased our debt by $125 million. With continued repurchases of the 2026 convertible notes or retirement as far as maturity, we expect net recourse debt to be a little changed. We have also prudently extended maturities while mitigating dilution with the capped call. When we think about our balance sheet, we prioritize a strong cash position and use of asset-level nonrecourse debt financing. This strategy provides the lowest cost capital to finance cash flow-producing assets backed by high credit consumers and to use parent recourse debt that is appropriately sized and balances maturity dates, cash interest costs and flexibility. Turning now to our outlook on Slide 17. The underpenetrated nature of our market gives us confidence we can sustain robust growth throughout this decade. In this strong long-term demand backdrop, our priority is to generate cash by continuing to increase customer values through growing storage adoption and other high-value products and services and by reducing costs by further driving efficiencies across the business. While sales activities in Q1 were slightly less than we previously anticipated, we are seeing strong demand signals and expect a material pickup to occur in Q2, leading to an inflection point with meaningfully higher installations in the second half. Storage capacity installed is expected to be in the range of 215 to 225-megawatt hours in Q2. This represents 105% to 115% growth year-over-year. For the full year, we are reiterating our guidance for storage capacity installed to be in a range of 800-megawatt hours to 1 gigawatt hour, reflecting 40% to 75% growth year-over-year. Solar energy capacity installed is expected to be in a range between 190 and 200 megawatts in Q2. At the midpoint, this represents 10% growth from Q1. Because of the pulling of demand in California in early 2023, year-over-year comparisons are less relevant in Q2. We are confident that Q1 volumes will mark the low point in the year and we expect robust sequential growth into the rest of the year. For the full year, we expect solar energy capacity installed year-over-year growth to be in the range of down 15% at the low end to flat at the high end. This updated range reflects recent sales activities and outlook. We believe this guidance still represents market share gains underpinned by the strength of our subscription offerings and our disciplined go-to-market approach. Our growth in the value we create with this volume will be much larger. We continue to forecast subscriber values will increase by greater than 10% in 2024 as we increase our mix of higher value offerings and input cost declines, resulting in growth in total value generated of greater than 10% in 2024. Turning to Slide 18. We remain committed to driving meaningful cash generation as we execute our margin focus and disciplined growth strategy. We are reiterating our cash generation outlook. We are guiding cash generation to be positive on a quarterly basis for the remainder of the year, with cash generation in Q4 at an annualized run rate of $200 million to $500 million. This run rate will be expanded upon on an annual basis into 2025. We have outlined our current set of assumptions underpinning this outlook on the bottom of Slide 18. The most notable variable is the realization of the domestic content adder. The low end of the guidance range assumes no domestic content adders while the high end assumes these adders are obtained. We currently expect a large portion of our storage systems to qualify for the domestic content adder. With that, let me turn it back to Mary.