Thank you, John. Good morning, everybody. Thank you for joining us today. As we sit here this morning, I could not be more optimistic about AMC's future because of two vital developments from the first quarter of 2023. First, is the clearly growing industry-wide box office up in North America by some 29% quarter-to-quarter versus last year, growing to more than $1.7 billion in the quarter. And industry-wide attendance in movie theaters in our markets across Europe has risen even closer to pre-pandemic levels, prior to pre-pandemic norms than even the surge in North American box office gains. Incidentally, that clearly growing industry box office has continued in April and so far in May. The April domestic box office was up about 58%, for example, and there is a flood of potential hit movies still to be released in the remainder of 2023. We previously indicated that we expected the 2023 industry-wide domestic box office to be up 15% to 25% or more over that of 2022. Well, now with a big start this year, we now believe the '23 domestic box office will be up 20% to 30% over last year. The second development in Q1 is that our shareholders, at our March 14 special meeting voted by an enormous margin by a totally 80% -- 88% in favor, but only 12% opposed or abstaining, to our proposal to combine our APE preferred units and AMC common shares. Of the AMC common shares that were voted, 72% voted yes. Of the APE holders that were voted, 91% voted, yes. As a result, AMC should be able to raise significant equity capital to outlast the pandemic's lingering aftermath affecting our cash reserves, help us pay down debt or for attractive M&A opportunities as well as for other growth initiatives. AMC's unique and singular ability to raise capital since 2020 has been one of the key reasons for our success in avoiding the fate of other movie theater chains, big and small that didn't make it. Our continued ability to raise capital is what gives us unbridled confidence in AMC's future. We thank our shareholders for the real wisdom shown in their votes of March of 2023. We are also aware that there is angst among some of the holders of a considerably smaller number that voted against our proposal. We hope to convince you over time that the majority of shares that were cast, voted in favor of strategies and actions, which will generate the best long-term results at AMC. Let's turn back to the box office. First, there were many movies that were in theaters in Q1 that had extraordinary appeal. Thank you, above all, to James Cameron for Avatar: The Way of Water. At a current growth of $2.3 billion globally, it's the third highest grossing movie in the history of Cinema. I need to remind any of you that we are near 19 months and 14 days away from Avatar 3 gracing our AMC and Odeon screens. It will be a Merry Christmas indeed in 2024. But it wasn't just Avatar that resonated with consumers in Q1, nine different movies won their week as the highest grossing films across the week of Q1. And the news is not only that there were more big movies in our theaters in Q1, there were more movies, period. Q1 proved out to be precisely true in what we have been predicting. The quantity of films now coming out theatrically is rising. If you look at wide releases, defined as films grossing $5 million or more domestically, there were 35 such movies in Q1 2023 versus only 26 in Q1 of 2022, that's a 34.6% increase in the supply of theatrically released films, regardless of their ticket sales numbers and dollars. As we look at the whole of the year, we continue to expect a similar substantial increase in the total movie count throughout the remainder of the year of movies being released theatrically. For more context, back to Q1, this year was the best first quarter domestic box office since March 31, 2020. And while still in a recovery mode, at 72% of 2019's pre-pandemic first quarter, the first quarter of 2023 represents a significant improvement compared to last year's first quarter which was only 56% of 2019 level, 56% a year ago, 72% this year, still rising. As for AMC, the first quarter's box office success for the industry translated into AMC's strongest start in four full years. AMC exceeded consensus market expectations for revenue. We exceeded consensus market expectations for adjusted EBITDA and exceeded consensus market expectations for adjusted net income as well as exceeding consensus market expectations for adjusted EPS. AMC enjoyed a 21% growth in global revenues to $954 million and a $69 million improvement in adjusted EBITDA, up from a $62 million loss in EBITDA a year ago to positive $7 million this year. Indeed, Q1 of 2023, combined with Q4 of 2022, marked the first two consecutive quarters of positive adjusted EBITDA since March of 2020. More than 47 million guests visited an AMC theater worldwide in the first quarter of 2023. 47 million guests stands in stark contrast to the naysayers and doom tellers of conventional wisdom who loudly but wrongly predicted that moving theaters were dead and an anachronism of by gone days. Those 47 million people tell us, as we have known for years and years, that movie theaters are very much alive and very much the center of the cultural fabric of the United States for years and decades to come. Also, as those 47 million guests came into our theaters, boy, did they even drink. Our food and beverage revenues per patron were eye-popping at $6.90 per patron globally and $7.99 per patron in the United States. This is so far above pre-pandemic consumption and it's occurring in a very high-margin business for us. When we walk through our doors, AMC guests also continue to seek out premium large format screens or PLS, as they're known, where AMC already has a commanding competitive lead. AMC is the largest IMAX operator in the world outside of China and about half of the IMAX screens in the United States can be found in AMC Theaters. Similarly exciting, we're the only operator of Dolby Cinema screens in the United States and continue to have contractual exclusive on Dolby Cinema going forward in the U.S. market. Our premium large format screens often over-indexed five or six-fold in box office revenues or more in the box office grosses that they bring to AMC, that's compared to a non-PLF AMC screen. So over the next one to three years, you will see us continue to invest in our PLFs. We intend to upgrade a significant number of IMAX screens back with laser. And we intend to increase the number of our PLFs by adding more IMAX screens and by adding more Dolby Cinema screens. We also expect to significantly grow the numbers of our private label house branded PLF screens called Private AMC in the United States and Middle East and iSense in Europe. We're not only making AMC a more compelling experience for moviegoers through more and better PLF screens, we have also contracted to install laser projectors in about half of our U.S. screens over the next three calendar years. Laser projection increases the light levels on our screens by 50% to 100%, which makes the pictures much brighter, much sharper and more vivid. It's also our biggest green initiative ever in our company's history as laser projection consumes far less energy, and there are no xenon bulbs to throw away in landfills. Installation of laser at AMC started back in 2022, and it is going extremely well. The fact that I'm talking about the investments we will be making in upgrading and enhancing our product is in itself enlightening and revealing. During the height of the pandemic, when we were fighting for survival, long-term planning around here was like a week from Thursday. But now, as we become ever so much more confident in AMC's vitality, we can actually look forward again to our longer-term future and specifically how we can improve the appeal of our theaters and how we can grow and transform AMC for M&A activity. Make no mistake, we are not out of the woods yet. The box office, while elevated, is not yet back at 2019 levels. As I previously indicated, that I believe COVID will be a five-year detour for the movie industry, we just started the fourth year in our ramp-up to eventual normality, but we are indeed on an improving ramp. Domestic box office revenues is a basic placeholder of size for our industry, was above $11 billion for five years in a row between 2015 and 2019. It was only $2 billion in 2020, then $4.5 billion in 2021, $7.5 billion in 2022, and no guarantees here, but we believe the domestic box office revenues are likely to be $9 billion or considerably more than that in 2023, that also is an upwards ramp. We're looking at AMC EBITDA, which was $771 million in 2019. Incredibly, seemly overnight, it sank to minus $999 million in calendar year 2020, minus $292 million a year in 2021, up positive but paltry $46 million in 2022, and if you combine first quarter actual results for 2023 with analyst consensus estimates for quarters two, three and four of 2023, that EBITDA number would be hundreds of millions of dollars higher in 2023 than was the case in our 2022 results. Look at the trend, $771 million pre-pandemic, following the negative $999 million, negative $292 million, positive $46 million, hundreds of millions of dollars higher than that now. Again, that's a confidence building and encouraging upwards ramp. In summary, we just posted encouraging and excellent Q1 results, and we have excellent things coming down the pipe for moviegoers as we go forward. I'll be back to talk briefly about a few other important topics after Sean goes into more detail about our operational and financing results. Our CFO, Sean Goodman.