Thanks, Darryl. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. Following the significant momentum in last year's back half, we are pleased with our start to fiscal '26 with both sales and operating income coming in nicely above our expectations and last year. First quarter sales growth once again outpaced the industry, highlighted by an overall 5% comparable sales increase above the high end of our full year guidance range, led again by strong Journeys results. Our overall comps were relatively consistent for February and March, April combined, highlighting the strength of our assortments as we transitioned out of winter and into spring. Journeys comps increased high-single digits as the initial phase of our strategic plan to accelerate growth extended its momentum and Journeys continued to gain market share. The consumer environment remains choppy and with recent first quarter events, this choppiness has become more pronounced. Consumers show a willingness to shop when there's a reason like we saw over Valentine's Day and Easter and retreat when there's not. And they remain quite selective. Our merchant and product teams continue to innovate and add freshness to our assortments to satisfy shoppers who are looking for must-have product and a reason to buy something new and who are passing on everything else. We know that in this environment, it is compelling footwear and freshness that motivate the consumer to purchase, and we've taken major actions to respond to these consumer needs. First quarter results are evidence of this outstanding work with all channels posting positive growth. Comparable sales increased 5%, our third consecutive positive increase with both stores up mid-single digits and online up high-single digits and wholesale channel growth of 5%. Journeys comps were strongly positive for the third consecutive quarter as well, up 8% and Schuh continued its positive comp run from Q4. Operating expense leveraged 170 basis points, benefiting from our ongoing cost reduction efforts and operating income and EPS improved year-over-year, thanks to the higher sales and better expenses. EPS would have been $0.05 better in Q1 had we not opportunistically bought back shares, which will ultimately benefit the full year. Before I give more color on the quarter and our strategic growth initiatives, I'd like to address the uncertainty with respect to tariffs, which I know is on everyone's minds and our active mitigation efforts. We've built a solid track record of successfully evolving our businesses and shown our resilience when confronted with economic, consumer and fashion disruption, which we demonstrated most recently coming out of the pandemic, and we are demonstrating once again with Journeys right now. The traction we're achieving and the continued strength of our footwear-focused strategy and initiatives give me confidence in our ability to navigate the current trade environment while building on our recent success. In summary, we are well diversified across a number of brands we sell. We have limited and reducing exposure to China sourcing, and we are implementing many actions to mitigate the impact of reciprocal tariffs. Thus, we are well positioned to navigate this. While there is some immediate impact and assuming tariffs remain close to levels where they are today, our teams are working hard to offset much of the impact this year. To dimension this, we need to talk about our retail business where we buy and sell a mix of in- demand brands and our branded business where we source our own product. Retail is the largest portion at more than 80% of sales, namely Journeys and Schuh. Schuh is 1/4 of this 80% and since it is U.K.-based, is largely unaffected directly by reciprocal tariffs. For Journeys, our top vendors are a mix of mostly larger premium global brands with diversified sourcing. While this situation is quite dynamic and evolving, to date, a limited number of our vendor partners have notified us of immediate price increases in response to reciprocal tariffs. We do expect price increases over time, but know our brands are working to mitigate tariff cost pressure and ensure key franchises remain stable. Brands with momentum as usual have more ability to take price, and we anticipate that our partners like us will remain flexible and respond accordingly to any changes in tariff rates versus current levels. We do not expect to absorb gross margin reductions. The biggest unknown will be the consumer response to price increases and inflationary pressure in general. We will be in constant communication with our brand partners to relay and react to this dynamic. Our experience shows that customers continue to engage and shop with us when we offer the best brands and the highly coveted footwear they desire, positioning us well to manage through this impact. Now to our branded side, Johnston & Murphy and Genesco Brands Group, where we source product directly. Overall, for Genesco and including our retail business, we estimated at the start of the year that a little over 10% of our products are subject to China tariffs with branded representing about half of this at 5% weighted toward Genesco Brands. Over the last several years, we've been working diligently to reduce risk across our supply chain with a concerted effort to diversify our countries of production. These efforts have meaningfully paid off with dramatically lower dependence on and a path to be almost completely out of China in short order as needed. Over the last 2 months, our teams have swiftly and continuously evaluated our product lines and sourcing plans and taken aggressive action to minimize the reciprocal tariff impact. At the current rates, we estimate the reciprocal tariffs in our branded business would result in unmitigated cost increases of roughly $15 million this fiscal year. We are taking the following actions, among others, to mitigate this cost pressure, accelerating, increasing or canceling inventory to take advantage of tariff windows, further diversifying suppliers and resourcing to countries with lower tariffs, working with long-standing factory partners to reduce costs and planning for strategic price increases targeted more toward the back half of the year, coupled with demand generation investments. While reciprocal tariffs have delivered considerable new challenges, as I said, we see a path to offset much of the impact this year. We are playing offense and we will capitalize on opportunities we see emerging. I want to sincerely thank our people across our company, especially in our product and supply chain areas for working around the clock and for the tremendous efforts you have put forth. I've seen you take some remarkable actions to put the company in a much better place. It's the ingenuity and determination of our highly experienced teams, working with our valued brand and factory partners and the high level of execution that allowed us to be -- to succeed in times like this before, and I am confident will again. Now for Q1 color and growth initiatives for each business, starting with Journeys. Our #1 priority this past year has been to improve performance of the Journeys business. After bringing in a new President, Chief Merchant and Chief Marketing Officer, the first phase of our strategic growth plan focused on injecting the product assortment with more newness excitement and storytelling and drove a noteworthy double-digit comp increase in the back half. Excited about these results, along with Journeys' distinctive team proposition and enhanced focus on the teen girl, our key brand partners are further stepping up in support of our strategic direction to better serve this customer through elevated product and depth. The growing strength of our assortment drove robust comps again in Q1. This comp strength was broad-based with 7 brands across both athletic and casual posting double-digit gains. The strongest gains were with athletic brands, although athletic and casual are well balanced in Journeys assortment. Vulcanized or canvas footwear is still pressured, but with diversification and growth of these other brands and positive consumer reaction to trends like low profile and 2000s running inspired styles, these increases are driving healthy growth overall. Journeys drove strong gains in Q1 store conversion and transaction size more than offsetting softer traffic when consumers pulled back from shopping outside of peak periods. We were pleased to see Journeys comp strengthen through the months of the quarter. We expect the same brands and trends to drive Q2 growth. And while not dependent on this to drive results, we are also excited about some new brands we have been introducing or reintroducing at Journeys as well. We have built inventory as planned in support of this growth. This inventory is high quality, and we have a strong track record of working with our brand partners to manage inventory to protect margin in times of volatility. After reviewing our other businesses, I'll briefly highlight the exciting initiatives that drive Journeys' strategic growth and transformation. Staying with retail and moving to Schuh. Comps increased low-single digits for the second consecutive quarter, benefiting from Schuh's work on brand and product elevation and improved access to top brands and styles. In a very challenging retail environment, by sharpening its customer focus and intensifying the messaging around the brand, Schuh is becoming more important as a key destination for its youth shopper for casual and athletic footwear. Like the U.S., the U.K. consumer remains very selective, putting pressure on the footwear category and purchases in the quarter overall. Key brands and must-have styles drove conversion with the same brands as Journeys driving the business. At over 40% of sales, Schuh's advanced digital capabilities and highly penetrated e-commerce business remains a key channel for consumer engagement with digital sales growth outpacing stores in Q1. Additionally, the kids business continued to perform well. We are excited to build on the enhanced brand partnerships and improved product access Schuh has gained so far. Through our partnership strength, we have already secured significant further improved product access with Nike and New Balance with exciting new styles and iconic franchises arriving this quarter. Turning now to Johnston & Murphy. After 2 consecutive years of record sales resulting from J&M's strategic repositioning to a more casual, more comfortable lifestyle brand, we've been working on delivering fresh and distinctive product in response to headwinds J&M experienced last year. While comps were down 2% in Q1, we were encouraged to see growth in store conversion and transaction size, demonstrating positive consumer response to the assortment and purchase intent, especially for new product. Both full-line retail stores and online comps were slightly positive, offset by factory stores where a more price-sensitive customer retreated and caused larger store traffic declines. One exciting product call out that speaks to the ongoing repositioning is the success of the Anders sneaker, which is the spring season's best-selling style. This updated and refined approach to a classic sneaker highlights J&M's ability to deliver casual lifestyle products while staying true to its DNA. We've also enjoyed a resurgence in dress shoes with our reimagined Upton Dress program. Blazers and outerwear were standouts as well. The brand continues to ramp up innovation efforts, delivering a 15% increase in new footwear constructions in the first half this year and even more freshness with a 60% increase in the back half in addition to new fabrics and design details in its apparel program. Accelerating its brand repositioning to build awareness and acquire new customers is J&M's other area of focus. This includes introducing an updated brand book this year, launching a limited edition collection of shoes and apparel in celebration of its 175th anniversary, rolling out its 175 years young media campaign and shifting marketing spend to further support brand building. New stores planned for the back half will also build brand awareness and counteract the deleverage the brand experienced from closed stores in Q1. Rounding out the branded discussion, our strategy to simplify our license portfolio to emphasize key brands and channels continues to benefit Genesco Brands Group. Our efforts to improve the portfolio will be ongoing. New product is resonating with our retail partners and consumers and pull forward sales from sunsetting licenses helped Q1 sales growth as well. It's worthwhile to now take the time to briefly highlight some of the progress we're making in our exciting Journeys transformation plan. While the teen, especially the teen girl, is well served with fashion apparel in the mall, no concept other than Journeys goes across athletic, casual and fashion footwear for the style-led teen. This is the opportunity and white space we identified to build on the traditional strength of Journeys to serve a wider teen audience interested in style and trend that is 6 to 7x larger than the market we've historically served. We're focused on 4 key areas to achieve this and to be the destination for where this customer shops for the latest fashion footwear. First, we're focused on diversification and strengthening our product leadership with best-in-class premium footwear brands. We've traditionally been stronger in the casual and canvas categories. A major growth driver is expansion of our premium athletic assortment. In Q1, athletic grew well into the double digits over last year and now represents more than 1/3 of Journeys footwear sales. At the same time, we continue to strengthen and expect growth from casual. It's the powerful combination of all 3 that defines our footwear leadership. I've said premium a number of times. This strategy is about more customers and more choice product. Product elevation is generating stronger average selling prices, highlighted by an increase of 12% in Journeys Q1 average footwear selling prices. Second, we're investing in our Journeys brand, bringing our updated brand positioning to build awareness with this expanded group of teen customers. You've already seen a change in our brand platform and imagery with continuity across online and stores and style vignettes online in the Journeys blog, showcasing our fashion authority. We're investing further in influencers, content and social, including TikTok and long-form content. One callout resonating with our core youth audience, our Jasmine Big Foot series has racked up 44 million views so far. We'll be launching a fun new brand platform and campaign at back-to-school and investing more dollars behind it, and we're thrilled with the almost 7 million loyalty members we've added in about 2 years. In our third area, elevating our customer experience, there's one outstanding initiative I'd like to spotlight our new 4.0 store design success. We needed an elevated setting to attract new customers and call attention to our more premium product, while at the same time retaining Journeys' energy and brand DNA. Our new store concept has delivered strong results and a sales lift of more than 25%. Our focus is on making the most productive stores even more productive. These stores have meaningfully better traffic, higher conversion and higher average selling prices and have been attracting a larger share of new customers. We now have 39 stores in the 4.0 format. The results have been so compelling, we've pulled forward more stores to remodel this year. By year-end, we expect to have 75-plus stores in this new format, underscoring our belief in this initiative as a cornerstone of Journeys transformation. Fourth, we're unlocking the power of our people. Our store teams are a key differentiator, delivering exceptional service and representing the heart of the brand. Our efforts to double down on selecting and training our people have contributed to improved store conversion we've been achieving. You can see why we're so delighted with Journeys evolution and the tremendous opportunity that lies ahead. We're in early innings in this strategic transformation with several waves of planned growth to broaden and deepen Journeys consumer appeal. All that said, turning now to guidance. We remain confident in our plan for Journeys and our other businesses, but recognize there's now more uncertainty in the external consumer environment. In Q2 so far, Journeys and J&M comps have been tracking at a similar pace to Q1, while Schuh has had an offset in timing of a sale period versus last year. While we faced some disruption in the second quarter, in particular, because of the shorter time frames to react to tariffs, given our limited China exposure and tariff mitigation efforts, we are reiterating our full year EPS guidance range of $1.30 to $1.70. Sandra will take you through the details, but we're optimistic about our ability to drive our business forward, especially in the second half during back-to-school and holiday when there are more reasons to shop. We have consistently capitalized on key periods, driving outsized volumes during these times and plan to do so again. As the results pay off, we also plan to continue the cycle of store improvement and investment for higher growth. We still have a lot of work to recapture our peak operating profit levels, but we expect fiscal '26 to be another step in the right direction. And now Sandra will take you through the specifics of our financial results and outlook.