Thank you, Richard and thanks, everyone, for joining us this afternoon. We're pleased to report first quarter results ahead of our expectations with all brands in our portfolio, driving positive comparable sales and market share gains. In addition, we remained focused on the discipline we've created around margin expansion, expense and inventory management and maintaining a strong balance sheet, which resulted in notably improved operating profit and cash flow versus the prior year. The rigor we've developed is becoming core to how we operate, as Richard noted, and it is enabling us to focus on what matters driving relevance and revenue as we aspire to become a high-performing house of iconic American brands. Some key highlights from the first quarter include the following: Net sales and comparable sales were both up 3% ahead of our expectations, with all four brands delivering positive comparable sales in the quarter. We delivered approximately 400 basis points of gross margin expansion and managed SG&A dollars in line with our expectations, delivering approximately 140 basis points of leverage. This resulted in operating margin of 6.1% for Q1, a 560 basis point improvement versus last year's adjusted operating margin. And we ended the quarter with $1.7 billion of cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments on the balance sheet. With the outperformance in the first quarter, we are raising our full year 2024 outlook for both revenue and operating income, demonstrating confidence that the progress on our four strategic priorities is driving near-term results, as well as building a strong foundation to deliver long-term shareholder value. Now turning to the detailed results for the quarter. Net sales of $3.4 billion increased 3% versus last year, with comparable sales up 3% as well. Due to the 53rd week in fiscal 2023, in order to maintain consistency, Comparable sales for the first quarter of fiscal 2024 are compared to the 13 weeks ended May 6, 2023 by brand. Starting with Old Navy, net sales were $1.9 billion, up 5% versus last year, with comparable sales up 3%. This represented the third consecutive quarter of positive comps at the brand as continued focus on operational rigor and brand reinvigoration has started to build improved consistency and performance. Turning to Gap brand. Net sales of $689 million were flat to last year, and comparable sales were up 3%. We are proud of the hard work the teams have done over the last few years to close unprofitable stores and partner several of our international markets. These strategic changes have begun to create a healthier core. While there's work to do, the recent brand reinvigoration efforts at Gap have resulted in positive comp sales during the last two quarters, driven by strong marketing and product execution. Banana Republic net sales of $440 million improved 2% year-over-year, with comparable sales up 1%. As Richard mentioned, we are working to reestablish Banana Republic and improve the fundamentals of the brand. While it's still early in the journey, we are pleased to see the focus on execution of Banana Republic show up in better first quarter results. Athleta net sales of $329 million increased 2% versus last year. Comparable sales were up 5% year-over-year, a significant improvement versus negative 10% in the fourth quarter, as consumers responded positively to the new product, brand expression and activations. We're encouraged by the outperformance of Athleta in the quarter and remain confident in the long-term potential of this incredible brand. In the second quarter, the brand will lap the last of the prior year's heavy discounting. And as a result, we are planning second quarter net sales for Athleta to be down mid-single digits versus last year as we navigate this unique period. Now turning to gross margin for the quarter. Gross margin of 41.2% expanded 410 basis points versus last year's reported gross margin. Compared to last year's adjusted rate, gross margin expanded approximately 400 basis points. Merchandise margin expanded 330 basis points, with the remaining 70 basis points from ROD leverage. The merchandise margin expansion was driven by an estimated 200 basis points of lower commodity costs with better inventory management contributing to the remaining improvement. Now, let me turn to SG&A. SG&A was $1.2 billion in the quarter, in line with our prior outlook. SG&A of 35.2% leveraged 220 basis points versus last year's reported rate and 140 basis points versus last year's adjusted rate. First quarter operating margin of 6.1% improved 640 basis points compared to last year's reported operating margin and 560 basis points versus last year's adjusted operating margin, driven by gross margin expansion and SG&A leverage. Earnings per share in the quarter were $0.41 and versus last year's reported loss per share of $0.05 and $0.01 of adjusted earnings per share. Now, turning to the balance sheet and cash flow. We maintained disciplined inventory management, ending Q1 down 15% year-over-year. Over the last year, we have meaningfully rationalized overall inventory levels, returning to our goal of managing a healthy stock-to-sales ratio, where inventory growth lagged sales growth. With that principle in mind, second quarter inventory is planned to be down in the low single-digit range versus last year. As I mentioned earlier, we ended the quarter with cash, cash equivalents and short-term investments of $1.7 billion, an increase of 48% from last year. Net cash from operating activities was $30 million in the first quarter, driven by higher operating profit. We remain committed to delivering an attractive quarterly dividend as a core component of total shareholder returns. During the quarter, we paid a dividend of $0.15 per share. On May 7, our Board approved maintaining that $0.15 dividend for the second quarter of fiscal 2024. As I reflect on our first quarter results, I'm encouraged by the improved financial performance, enabled by continued focus, discipline and rigor, driving revenue growth across our portfolio of brands. Now let me provide some details on our updated outlook. Starting with full year 2024. As a result of our strong first quarter results, we are increasing our outlook for fiscal 2024 and reflecting higher sales and meaningfully higher operating income growth compared to our prior expectations. We now expect fiscal year 2024 net sales to be up slightly year-over-year, excluding the 53rd week compared to our prior outlook for net sales to be roughly flat. Our first quarter performance is encouraging and gives us confidence in our revised outlook as we balance the stronger trends with other unique factors. First, as a reminder, 2024 is a 52-week year, but will be compared in total to a 53-week year in 2023. To reiterate, the loss of the 53rd week results in a detrimental impact of approximately $160 million to fiscal 2024 net sales. And I would like to provide more detail on the impact of the quarterly cadence of sales in the year. The first quarter 2024 net sales benefited by approximately two percentage points from the timing shift as we lost a low volume week in February and added a modestly larger volume week in May. We expect second and third quarter to also benefit by approximately one percentage point each due to weekly shifts. The fourth quarter is more dramatically impacted as it loses November week 1, which is a high-volume week. The impact in the fourth quarter is expected to be a negative impact to sales of approximately seven percentage points. This sales loss will also impact gross margin due to ROD deleverage on the lower sales volume. Second, similar to last quarter, global economic conditions remain uncertain and are top of mind. Our outlook assumes modest impacts in the first half related to the trade situation in the Red Sea, which to date have largely been in line with our expectations. Third, while recent commentary has been mixed, we are not anticipating major changes to consumer or macroeconomic dynamics in 2024. And fourth, we are maintaining our view on the potential CFPB ruling on late fees for credit card holders. Our outlook continues to assume a mid-year implementation of the ruling, which we expect to be largely offset in 2024 by other levers within our credit card program. Moving to gross margin. We anticipate gross margin expansion of approximately 150 basis points for the full year compared to fiscal 2023's gross margin of 38.8%, as a result of better-than-expected first quarter results. Our gross margin outlook contemplates the following factors. We expect commodity cost tailwinds in the first half of the year, which we anticipate will become largely neutral in the second half of the year, resulting in approximately 100 basis points of gross margin leverage for the full year. We continue to take a measured view of the consumer environment in fiscal 2024 and are planning a slight benefit to gross margin from more disciplined inventory management. And we expect ROD as a percentage of sales to be relatively neutral on a year-over-year basis. Regarding SG&A, we continue to expect full year SG&A of approximately $5.1 billion. In the second quarter, we expect SG&A dollars to increase roughly 5% versus last year's adjusted SG&A due to timing shifts in incentive accruals and advertising spend. Overall, we are actively working to identify and drive cost efficiencies across multiple areas of the business. We will keep you updated on progress as we move through the year. When considering our first quarter results, we are meaningfully revising our full year 2024 operating income growth to be in the mid-40% range compared to our prior outlook of low to mid-teen growth. We are pleased with trends quarter-to-date and are planning for net sales in Q2 to be up low single-digits versus last year. As it relates to second quarter gross margin, we expect approximately 300 basis points of improvement versus last year's gross margin of 37.6% with commodity benefits similar to the first quarter and modest improvements related to improved inventories and ROD leverage. In closing, we were pleased to deliver strong financial results during the first quarter, demonstrated through better sales trends, gross margin expansion, expense discipline, lean inventory and a strong balance sheet. The financial and operational rigor that we have worked to develop and will continue to pursue is enabling us to focus on reinvigorating our brands, with the goal of generating sustainable, profitable growth and delivering value for our shareholders over the long-term. With that, we'll open up the line for questions. Operator?