Thanks, Neal, and good morning everyone, and thank you for joining our first quarter earnings call. Looking at our year-to-date results, it's clear that consumers are prioritizing travel, which we saw in our occupancy rates and contract sales growth during the first quarter. Spring Break travel made headlines this year with record-breaking numbers in March, with beach vacations topping the list of preferred destinations. In addition, over 45% of Americans, earning over $100,000 a year recently surveyed, believe now is a good time to spend on leisure travel and intentions to book leisure travel have been on a clear uptrend. Since becoming CEO earlier this year I've been on the road visiting a number of our resorts and have had the chance to meet with many of our associates who are responsible for delivering unforgettable vacation experiences for our owners, members and guests. Our unique destinations, trusted brands, excellent service and caring culture are just a few of the reasons we see vacationers coming back to visit us time and time again. Looking forward, despite the uncertainty of the overall economic environment, we expect strong occupancies from our owners, members and guests to continue this year. Consumers want a vacation and they want to do with brands they trust in spacious upscale accommodations in highly sought-after markets and we have some of the best brands in the most desirable locations in the industry. Now, moving on to our results. 2022 was a great year for Marriott Vacations and we kept the momentum going as we enter 2023. Occupancy was generally 90% in the first quarter, with our ski beach and golf markets all in high demand, while Asia Pacific continued its recovery with resort occupancy more than 30 points higher than last year's first quarter. With these strong occupancies, a robust tour package pipeline and the work of our marketing teams, we grew tours by 18% on a year-over-year basis. As expected, VPG declined year-over-year due to the strength of last year's first quarter, but it increased 7% sequentially and remains 30% above pre-pandemic levels. We grew contract sales by 10% in the first quarter compared to the prior year, illustrating the strong demand for our vacation ownership products and first-time buyers represented more than 30% of our contract sales this quarter, up roughly 200 basis points from the prior year. Abound by Marriott Vacations, which we launched last year, continues to resonate with owners and first-time buyers. As a reminder, the Abound program allows the owners of our Marriott Westin and Sheraton Vacation Club products to have seamless access across these three branded resort systems and is helping us drive tour flow. In our Hyatt Vacation Ownership business, we continue to make great progress integrating the legacy Welk Resorts. In March, we launched a new owner benefit that provides discounted stays for those able to take advantage of near-term resort availability. Later this year, we will rebrand all of the legacy Welk Resorts as Hyatt Vacation Club. We will also add more vacation options, as we launch the BEYOND program, allowing owners to exchange for cruises, tours and hotel stays. Moving to our Exchange & Third-Party Management segment, inventory utilization remained very strong and we are starting to see higher transaction activity from the accounts we added last year. However, with inventory deposits lagging last year, revenue was down year-over-year and profit excluding VRI Americas, which we sold last April declined $4 million. Finally, while lower inventory availability negatively impacted our first quarter results, we did see inventory improve as the quarter progressed. In summary, despite concerns about inflation and the broader economy, consumers continue to prioritize vacations, enabling us to grow adjusted EBITDA by 8% on a year-over-year basis and return $134 million to shareholders through a combination of share repurchases and dividends. Looking forward, I remain excited about the trajectory of our business and the opportunities that lie ahead for us. With that, I'll turn it over to Tony.