Thanks, Amanda, and good morning to everyone joining our call today. We are pleased with our first quarter results, which reflect a strong start to the year. As expected, our portfolio experienced significant RevPAR growth in the first quarter as compared to 2022, particularly in January and February, as we lap the negative impact of the Omicron variant in the beginning of last year. Overall demand in the quarter reflected the continued transition in our business to a more normalized mix of leisure, corporate transient and group demand. This trend particularly aided performance in our hotels and resorts that have traditionally been more dependent on corporate transient and group demand and that, in many cases, were more significantly impacted by the Omicron variant during the early part of last year. For the quarter, we reported net income of $6.3 million, adjusted EBITDAre of $71.3 million and adjusted FFO per share of $0.40, with all of these measures reflecting significant increases over the first quarter of last year. Same-property RevPAR in the quarter was $179.55, an increase of 23.9% as compared to 2022. The majority of RevPAR growth came from occupancy, which increased roughly 10 points as compared to the first quarter of 2022, while average daily rates increased 5.2%. As compared to the first quarter of 2019. RevPAR for the 30 hotels we currently own that were open at that time was down just 1.6% for the quarter. For these 30 hotels, which excludes Hyatt Regency Portland and W Nashville, occupancy was roughly 10 points below 2019, while ADR was up 13.5%. Adjusted EBITDAre of $71.3 million reflected growth of 42.8% over the first quarter of 2022. Margins improved 167 basis points compared to the first quarter of 2022 despite continued inflationary pressures, particularly in labor and utilities. Importantly, the demand recovery continues to broaden. In the first quarter, 8 of our 10 largest markets, as measured by 2022 EBITDA contribution reported double digit RevPAR increases as compared to the first quarter of 2022. RevPAR for the Dallas hotels increased more than 50%, while RevPAR grew more than 30% in our Houston, Atlanta and San Francisco/San Mateo hotels. Outside of our top 10 markets, Portland and Santa Clara experienced RevPAR increases of more than 60% and 70%, respectively. These are all markets with larger hotels with a relatively higher dependence on business transient and group demand, and they are still performing well below 2019 levels. Therefore, we continue to believe that these markets continue to present the greatest potential for recovery and earnings growth in the quarters ahead. Conversely, the 2 top 10 markets with RevPAR declined in the quarter, Key West and Napa, lapped particularly strong performance in the first quarter of 2022 as Omicron did not meaningfully impact demand in these markets. Additionally, the unusually rainy weather had a substantial negative impact on demand in Napa for the quarter, with the bad weather conditions also impacting leisure demand in the remainder of California. Despite lots of uncertainty in the economy, we have not yet observed any signs of broad-based demand slowing. The second quarter is off to a good start against a challenging year ago growth comparison. We estimate that our preliminary April same-property RevPAR is approximately $196, which would be down roughly 2% as compared to April 2022. Preliminary April occupancy of 78.7% is nearly flat to 2022 and preliminary ADR is down approximately 2%, reflecting the demand mix shift we are witnessing in the portfolio. For the 30 hotels that were open in 2019, preliminary RevPAR for April was approximately $197, which would be a 1.1% increase as compared to April of 2019. These preliminary results are encouraging given the historical seasonal strength of the month of April within our portfolio, including very strong leisure-driven performance in April last year. We remain cautiously optimistic for the balance of 2023 and beyond based on the trends we continue to see in our business. With first quarter results coming in as we expected 2 months ago and preliminary top line performance in April also matching our expectations, we are reiterating the midpoint of our full year outlook for RevPAR growth and adjusted EBITDAre. Atish will provide additional details on our updated guidance during his remarks. Let me highlight 4 key factors supporting our long-term optimism. First, as I have mentioned, our portfolio is returning to a more traditional mix of business. Historically, about 1/3 of our mix was group. And with continued momentum in group booking pace for 2023, our current group revenue -- group room revenue on the books for 2023 is only about 6% of the high 2019 levels for the 30 hotels that were open at that time. Including our recent acquisitions, Hyatt Regency Portland at the Oregon Convention Center and W Nashville, group room revenue on the books for 2023 is currently about 20% ahead of 2022 levels, driven by increases in both room nights and rate. We are also seeing continued momentum in corporate transient business. Midweek occupancies continued to improve meaningfully in the first quarter, increasing by mid-teen percentage points on both Tuesday and Wednesday nights as compared to the first quarter of 2022. Second, we have numerous growth drivers embedded in our existing portfolio that we believe will support growth this year and beyond. As mentioned previously, we have recovery potential in our leisure, urban, group and business transient focused hotels, mainly Marriott San Francisco Airport, Hyatt Regency Santa Clara, our 2 Dallas hotels and our 3 Houston hotels. These 7 hotels reported more than 40% RevPAR growth on average in the first quarter as compared to 2022. However, EBITDA of these 7 hotels in the first quarter of 2022 was still approximately 22% below the first quarter of 2019. Also, we own several recently renovated properties and properties undergoing renovations that are soon to be completed that we expect to be meaningful internal EBITDA growth drivers. These include Hyatt Regency Grand Cypress, Park Hyatt Aviara, Waldorf Astoria Atlanta Buckhead and Grand Bohemian Hotel Orlando, amongst others. Looking further ahead, our upcoming transformation of the Hyatt Regency Scottsdale Resort & Spa at Gainey Ranch to a luxury Grand Hyatt resort is expected to be a meaningful contributor to our future growth. And Hyatt Regency Portland at the Oregon Convention Center and W Nashville are continuing to ramp as the base of group business builds at both properties. We continue to believe that both will serve as significant drivers of future EBITDA growth as these properties stabilize over the next few years. Third, our flexible balance sheet, which was further strengthened as a result of our recent activities, supports continued investment in our portfolio while also balancing returns to shareholders in the form of share repurchases and our $0.10 per share quarterly dividend. And fourth, Xenia’s portfolio of high-quality hotels and resorts will continue to benefit from diminishing levels of new competitive supply as the environment for new hotel development remains challenging. Based on the most recent data from Lodging Econometrics, weighted room supply growth in our submarkets is expected to be just 1.2% in 2023 and 1% in 2024. This represents a meaningful reduction in growth from about 3% annually just a few years ago. As for the transaction environment, we believe we are very well positioned to remain opportunistic as it relates to essential future acquisitions. We continue to look at opportunities that meet our criteria, including top 25 markets and key leisure destinations. However, we are willing to be patient as the overall environment continues to evolve and as we evaluate whole avenues to drive shareholder value. And with that, I will turn the call over to Barry.