Thanks, Laith and thanks to all of you for joining the call today. As we pass the midpoint of the year and shift our focus on the remainder of 2023, Range's business plan is on track, while we continue to make steady progress on key objectives. I believe this quarter's results reflect the resilience and durability of Range's business. Range's competitive cost structure, low capital intensity, liquids optionality, and thoughtful hedging allowed us to generate healthy full cycle margins despite cyclically low commodity prices. During the second quarter, Range successfully delivered on our operational plan safely and with peer-leading efficiencies. Generated free cash flow, despite low commodity prices, and retired a portion of our debt maturing in 2025. We also published our latest corporate sustainability report last week, showcasing our low emissions intensity and ongoing safety and environmental leadership, all made possible by our dedicated team. As we walk through the results of the quarter, each highlight underpins the durable and repeatable nature of our program that starts with the quality and quantity of Range's inventory along with our talented team. Looking forward, our objectives remain consistent with us keenly focused on areas discussed on prior calls, peer-leading capital efficiency that supports our low breakeven costs, a program that generates free cash flow through the cycles, continue return of capital to shareholders, and prudent capital allocation that balances further debt reduction, opportunistic share repurchases, and the long-term development of our world class asset base. Whether discussing the results during upcoming calls or today, our results and initiatives align and support these strategies. As we look back on the second quarter, all-in capital came in at $175 million, while capital spent for the first half of the year total $326 million, placing us firmly on track versus our stated plans. During the early part of Q3, activity was reduced to a single horizontal rig, where we will maintain for the remainder of the year. Our base track crew will also remain with us through the end of the year, with a second spot crew slated for release late in the third quarter. As previously discussed, this will result in a decreasing capital spend across the second half of the year, while production radically increases, which aligns favourably with today's shape of forward commodity prices. Production for the second quarter came in at 2.08 BCF equivalent per day, which is slightly ahead of guidance provided during our prior call. The scheduled infrastructure maintenance and upgrade projects were completed on or ahead of schedule, providing uplift to the quarter, versus our prior guide. Supporting our production profile, we turn to sales 11 wells located across our dry, wet and super rich acreage, with the bulk of these wells on pads with existing production, creating some of our most capital-efficient operations. Turn-in-lines for the year are expected to peak in Q3 with turn-in-lines weighted towards the back half of the quarter in conjunction with the commissioning of additional wet gas compression. They should drive sequential growth of approximately 30 million cubic feet to 50 million cubic feet a day in the third quarter and aligns with our production plan for the year, while generating an end-of-year production level of approximately 2.2 BCF equivalent per day. And to reiterate an earlier message, we see this production profile as a complementary setup as commodity prices improve after the shoulder mugs and into the winter. Looking at operations, the drilling team continued to improve efficiencies and set new program records during the second quarter. 24 wells were drilled in our Southwest Pennsylvania dry and wet acreage positions while returning to pads with existing production for the majority of our activity. The average drilled lateral length during Q2 was approximately 12,400 feet or a 5% increase versus the 222 average. As part of Q2, the team also added four wells with lateral length exceeding 20,600 feet. These represent the longest laterals drilled in the program's history with the longest misery just under 22,000 feet. In addition to drilling our longest lateral, the team also showed great efficiencies, with 24-hour periods in excess of 6,000 feet. As a result, our average daily lateral footage drilled exceeded 4,700 feet per day in Q2, representing a 42% increase versus the 222 full year average. This was driven by rig equipment changes that could benefit future development programs. Completions also improved efficiencies and set new program records as the team averaged over 10 stages per day throughout the quarter, including a 24-hour record of 17 stages. As a result, the first half of the year averaged 9.3 frac stages per day, representing at 13% increase versus the 222 full year average. Supporting this accomplishment was the utilization of our improved completion surface equipment configuration, enhanced logistics, and the benefit of returning to existing pads. On our previous call we mentioned a pad that was being completed during the first quarter and was projected to be one of Range's most overall efficient pads. This particular operation consisted of four wells located in our wet acreage and was completed and turned to sales during the second quarter. On this pad, operations were able to capture two of our top-fastest days drilling in the lateral and the highest overall completion efficiency for a wet area completion, with the water and logistics team setting new records for water handling by eliminating unnecessary wait time. Overall, the pad cycle time from spud to first sales was just over 180 days, for 65,000 lateral feet of combined wellbore, more than a 50% improvement versus a similar area pad developed in 2021. This ongoing improvement is a byproduct of the use of new technology and the hard work from our operational groups in Pennsylvania. I congratulate the team on this accomplishment and know that they will continue to look for ways to further support our peer-leading capital efficiency. Turning to supply chain, in the last few months, rig count started reflecting signs of decline in the basin as activity decreased under the current commodity environment. Range has also observed some softening in other OFS categories. As we work through Q3 and deploy our annual bid process, we will continue to follow the market and pursue savings opportunities. As we look towards 2024 and beyond, we expect Range to remain at the low end of the capital cost curve. On NGL macro, we believe the historically low prices we saw in the second quarter are set to improve later this year. LPG exports out of the U.S. have been robust as the three-month rolling average reached a new record exceeding 2 million barrels a day in April, connecting U.S. LPG supply with recovering petrochemical demand and increasing pH capacity in China. This growth in exports, coupled with moderating supply growth out of the U.S. is expected to bring storage levels back into balance later this year. Looking at ethane, prices are off their lows. And fundamentals remain supportive as the U.S. has set records for both domestic and export demand with year-to-date 2023 averaging 2.5 million barrels a day or 62,000 barrels a day higher than this time last year. For Range, our uniquely positioned NGL portfolio positions us well to capture opportunities both international and domestic and supports our 2023 NGL guidance range of $1 per barrel discount to $1 per barrel premium relative to the Mont Velvieu index. This liquids optionality is a positive contributor to Range's resilience through cycles as was the case this quarter. On the natural gas front, we are encouraged by continued gas power generation strength this summer. When paired with minimal dry gas production growth expected from the Haynesville and Permian over the next several quarters. We see the domestic natural gas market gradually rebalancing later this year before further strengthening with increased LNG exports next year and beyond. As we have discussed on prior calls, Range's successes are rooted in a culture focused on safety and the environment. During the quarter, Range completed the MIQ certification process and received an A grade with third-party audit covering our Southwest PA assets. Range's LDAR inspection program, which increased in frequency to 8x per year at the end of 2022. And source level production facility design, detection and mitigation practices were recognized by the audit and helped us maintain withinthe industry's lowest emissions intensities. For safety, we observed further improvements in our safety performance in the field in Q2 with zero OSHA incidents for the quarter. You can find more details on these accomplishments and others in our corporate sustainability report that was released last week. As we clear the midyear point and focus on the second half of 2023 and beyond, our program is on track. After drilling over 1,500 Marcellus wells, the team continues to advance our overall efficiencies. Delivering on repeatable well performance across our large contiguous inventory and marketing our production to diverse outlets providing enhanced margins. As I mentioned on the prior call, the resilience of Range's business is being demonstrated in today's challenging price environment, as we're still delivering on stated objectives and generating free cash flow for 2023. I'll now turn it over to Mark to discuss the financials.