Thanks Chris and good afternoon everyone. I certainly appreciate being on the call this afternoon with us. Just before addressing our quarterly performance, I wanted to highlight that we were awarded the Hilton Brand Development Award for our Home2 Suites at Woodland Hills Warner Center, California that we've spoken highly about and give special recognition to the teams from Chatham, Island, Western International, and EPCO, who worked incredibly hard over several years to bring that project to fruition. Turning to our performance in the quarter, which was very strong with higher than expected RevPAR growth, driving EBITDA growth of 34% and more than doubling FFO per share to $0.16 exceeding consensus estimates of $0.13, driven by meaningful growth in some of our larger markets, more reliant on the business traveler, RevPar growth was over 25% in the quarter, the fourth best amongst all lodging companies. Our RevPar growth was attributable to similar growth in both occupancy and ADR of approximately 14%. Relative to 2019, RevPAR was off about 6% and that result was adversely impacted by approximately 700 basis points due to the performance at our four Silicon Valley hotels. So excluding those hotels, RevPAR was up almost 1% compared to 2019. Relative to 2019, RevPAR approved each of the first four months of 2023 with RevPAR down 12%, 5%, 4%, and less than 2%, an encouraging trend and a key indicator that business travel continues its recovery across the country, even in Silicon Valley. Leisure travel remains strong with all of our leisure markets producing strong growth in the quarter. We can look at Destin, Florida up 13%, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, up 40%, Portland, Maine, up 16%, Anaheim up 14%, Fort Lauderdale up 9%, and Savannah up 28%. Occupancy finished the quarter at 69% up almost 14% and about 10% off pre-pandemic levels evidenced by the year-over-year growth of 28%. We continue to see the return of the business traveler across our portfolio as well as improved international travel due to loosening restrictions on entering the U.S. and obtaining work visas. Weekday occupancy is the best indicator of business travel and versus 2019, weekday occupancy in the first quarter improved each month of 2023 and was 69% for the entire first quarter. Weekday ADR was up approximately 17% versus last year and only down approximately 1% versus 2019. An encouraging pattern given the first quarter historically is our slowest of the year. Weekend RevPar remains strong as it was up approximately 9% in the quarter versus 2019. As we move into the second and third quarters, we are more confident with respect to the outlook as we see business travel demand continuing to build month by month. For the first time since the pandemic, we're also really starting to see meaningful demand pick up from Korea, Japan, Taiwan, and China in our Silicon Valley hotels and our Bellevue, Washington Hotel. Offsetting some of this recovery is going to be the intern programs in 2023. Since our last call, many of the world's largest tech companies such as Meta, Apple, Google, Microsoft, and T-Mobile have meaningfully reduced their programs in 2023 following significant corporate layoffs. Although, they are expected to fully return in 2024, we'll see a decline in intern revenue of approximately 80% to 90% across our four hotels in Silicon Valley and Bellevue, Washington from about $12 million in revenue last year to between $1.5 million and $2.5 million this year. Thankfully, and most importantly, we are able and expect to be able to make up at least half to 75% of the intern related EBITDA loss of $6 million. So work is ongoing and recent occupancy trends in Silicon Valley particularly are stronger than expected on a week by week basis. So we feel very positive about the piece of the intern business and the EBITDA related to it that we should be able to replace. Operationally, our margins grew 200 basis points over last year to a post-pandemic first quarter high of 40%. Good flow through and corporate expense controls allowed us to double free cash flow before CapEx and amortizing debt from about $5 million last year to $10 million this year. Lastly, I want to touch on our financial condition, which is extremely healthy as we sit here at our lowest leverage levels in over a decade. During the first quarter, we've already paid off loans, amounting the $73 million, including the high rated loan on our Woodland Hills Hotel, as well as two maturing loans, replacing debt with an average interest rate of 8% with the term loan that is currently at 6.2%. Funded with our remaining borrowings and our term loan and free cash flow on May 5, we'll repay another $16 million maturing mortgage after that, we'll only have 2023 maturing debt of about $60 million secured by two hotels for later this year. And we have full capacity in our $260 million unsecured credit facility. Touching quickly on external growth, excuse me, the transaction market has been dormant, but it does seem like it's starting to ease up a bit. With the significant rise in interest rates and a bunch of maturing debt occurring throughout the industry, we believe there'll be some opportunities to acquire hotels that fit into our high quality portfolio in the back half of the year. With 39 hotels, we can acquire one or two hotels and it significantly moves the needle with respect to EBITDA and FFO growth. We want to continue to increase further our focus, of course, on the extended stay segment. With that, I'd like to turn it over to Dennis for a little more color. Dennis?