Thank you, Aaron, and good morning, everyone. We are pleased with our performance in the first quarter as we continued to deliver on our strategic priorities and achieved operating results that exceeded expectations, including profitability that was above the high end of our guidance ranges. Our portfolio performed well and grew occupancy 16 points from the prior year with average daily rates up nearly 3%. While the impact of the Omicron variant made for easier comps in January and February, we also saw meaningful occupancy growth in March and are pleased by what we are seeing into April, which continues to point towards sustained demand growth even as we move into cleaner year-over-year comparable periods. What is particularly encouraging is that demand growth continues to diversify away from just leisure travel and is composed of more business transient and group events. In fact, two of our top tghree highest occupancy hotels in the quarter were the Hilton San Diego Bayfront and Renaissance Orlando, both large convention hotels that were able to replace discounted transient demand with larger amounts of higher-rated corporate group business. The Renaissance Orlando set an all-time monthly revenue and profit record in March, demonstrating the strength of demand for group events and the success of the additional meeting space we added several years ago. Our hotels continue to command strong rates with total portfolio ADR of $314 in the first quarter, a 3% increase from last year and an 18% increase over 2019 on a comparable basis, which is the highest first quarter ADR the portfolio has ever achieved. Our urban and convention hotels continued to see the biggest gains and grew rates nearly 16% in the quarter as compared to the prior year. The Hyatt Regency San Francisco, once again, led the portfolio with rates up an impressive 46% and together with 22 points of occupancy growth, led to year-over-year RevPAR growth of nearly 120%. But rate growth in the quarter wasn’t limited to San Francisco as New Orleans, Long Beach, San Diego, Boston and Wailea all drove double-digit gains. Our resort properties generated a combined rate growth of nearly 2% in the first quarter, which is a solid result given the record performance in the prior year. And for the comparable resorts, rates are up an impressive 47% over 2019. The combination of growth in occupancy and rate led to first quarter total portfolio RevPAR of $219, up 32% from the first quarter of 2022, which was the high end of our guidance range. Non-room revenue came in strong during the first quarter, benefiting from continued increases in group activity. Banquet sales per group room, was $216 in Q1, up 19% to 2022 and up 18% to 2019 on a comparable basis. Including the out-of-room spend our portfolio generated an additional $130 of revenue per available room in the quarter for total RevPAR of approximately $349, an increase of 34% from last year. On the expense side, we continue to navigate the increases in costs we’ve seen over the last several years and look for ways to reduce expense pressures. While hourly wage growth continues to hover around the high end of historical ranges, we have seen some recent moderation and have been able to drive efficiencies in certain areas to help offset higher labor costs. Food and beverage margins for the total portfolio increased substantially from the prior year, given the improved banquet mix and a higher volume of group events. Food and beverage margins for the comparable portfolio were also 80 basis points higher than 2019, which is a direct result of working with our operators to optimize menu offerings and review pricing to mitigate rising food and beverage costs. Despite cost pressures, our total portfolio generated an EBITDA margin of 26.9% in Q1, which is 330 basis points higher than the first quarter of last year. Excluding our hotel in DC, which is under renovation, the comparable portfolio EBITDA margin was nearly 31.5%, which is consistent with the same quarter in 2019, even with nearly 9 points of lower occupancy. As we move further into 2023, our focus continues to be on maximizing portfolio EBITDA as we aim to bring each hotel to its optimal occupancy level. Now turning to segmentation. Our portfolio generated over 222,000 total group room nights in the quarter, and the group segment comprised roughly 46% of total demand. Q1 group room night volume represents approximately 90% of comparable pre-pandemic amounts with average rates 13% higher, leading to a total group room revenue that was 2% higher than in the same quarter of 2019. Group production for all current and future periods in Q1 was 167,000 room nights, approximately 3% more than what we put on the books in Q1 2022 and at 3% higher rates, leading to a nearly 6% increase in revenue production relative to last year. In terms of transient business, which accounted for roughly 49% of total room nights in the quarter, comparable rate came in at $327 or 23% higher than the pre-pandemic levels we saw in the same quarter of 2019. As we move further into 2023, we are pleased by the trends we are seeing in transient bookings, particularly with business travel, where our volumes are increasing, but where we still have the most opportunity to grow occupancy across the portfolio. Based on what we have seen so far this year, we remain encouraged about our outlook for 2023. Lead volumes and group production are strong. Group pickup is running higher than historical averages, underscoring the trend that we have seen of groups looking closer into their events. Pace for the remainder of the year is 18% higher than 2022, driven by increases in both room nights and average rates. We believe our portfolio is well-positioned for the remainder of the year with a healthy balance of leisure, group and business transient demand. Group pace at our 2 Wine Country resorts for the rest of the year is up 56% relative to last year and is composed of some very high-quality events, which will come with attractive rates and meaningful ancillary spend. Based on seasonal demand patterns for the market, the resorts will generate the majority of their full year EBITDA in the second and third quarters. Despite the rainfall that hampered results in the first quarter, it did not stop us from enlarging the lobby bar at Montage Healdsburg, creating a new indoor outdoor destination with pristine vineyard and mountain views, and expanding Hudson Springs, our poolside restaurant. Based on what we see today, we expect that the 2023 EBITDA contribution from these two resorts should increase meaningfully from last year as they continue to season. The Renaissance DC is in the final stages of its transformation to the Westin D.C. downtown, which will be completed and re-branded during the fourth quarter. The hotel team has done a fantastic job during the renovation, managing displacement and driving profitability. The hotel has a solid base of group business on the books for the second half of 2023, which will lead to meaningful growth for the second half of the year. In addition to the capital recycling we completed last year and the investments we are making into our portfolio now, we also made further progress on our third strategic priority of returning capital to shareholders. Since the start of the year, we have completed over $20 million of share repurchases, which brings our combined total since the start of 2022 to approximately $130 million at a price per share that represents a compelling discount to consensus estimates of NAV and an attractive yield on our earnings. Additionally, we took advantage of some volatility in the interest rate market to swap $175 million of debt in the quarter, bringing our split of fixed rate debt and preferred back in line at nearly 65% of total. Last, we addressed our only 2023 maturity by refinancing the existing $220 million mortgage secured by the Hilton San Diego Bayfront with a new 2-year term loan that can be extended for an additional year if we choose. Both transactions strengthen our already healthy balance sheet and further bolster our liquidity position. To sum things up, better-than-expected performance in the first quarter gives us confidence as we move further into 2023. Our balanced approach to capital allocation in 2022 and 2023 will allow Sunstone to benefit from multiple layers of growth in coming years. We continue to execute on our strategic priorities. And while the transaction environment remains challenging, we retained significant investment capacity to deploy when opportunities arise, and we will seek to actively allocate capital, investing in our portfolio, recycling sales proceeds into new growth opportunities and returning capital to our shareholders through share repurchase and dividends. We believe this is a winning formula that will provide long-term value to our owners. And with that, I will turn it over to Robert to give some additional thoughts on our in-process and upcoming capital investments.