
Utilizing the power of music to raise money and awareness to fight Parkinson's disease and related illnesses (ALS, PSP) and to support affected individuals and communities.
Light of Day Foundation Inc centers its giving on fighting Parkinson’s disease and related illnesses, with recent grants framed around a single purpose: “assist research in finding a cure.” In 2023, the largest grant in the recent list went to Parkinson's Foundation in New York for $100,000, followed by $50,000 to Cure Psp in Timonium, Maryland. That pattern places research and disease-specific support at the core of the foundation’s work, especially for Parkinson’s, PSP, and ALS, the conditions named in its stated focus areas. The foundation also links its mission to music and arts-based fundraising and community support, which helps explain why its grantmaking connects both research organizations and groups serving affected people. Smaller awards in the recent grants list show that the foundation does not limit itself to one beneficiary type: Joan Dancy and Pals in Red Bank, New Jersey, received $25,000, and the Michael J Fox Foundation in New York received $25,000. The pattern is consistent with a public charity giving targeted, project-specific support to organizations working on biomedical and community responses to these diseases.
The clearest theme in the recent grants is disease-focused research support. Light of Day Foundation Inc gave $100,000 to Parkinson's Foundation in New York and $50,000 to Cure Psp in Timonium for the same stated purpose: “assist research in finding a cure.” The foundation’s stated focus areas show that this work extends beyond Parkinson’s disease to ALS and progressive supranuclear palsy, so the medical emphasis is not limited to one diagnosis. Community-facing support appears alongside research. Joan Dancy and Pals in Red Bank received $25,000, connecting the foundation’s mission to programs that serve affected individuals and communities. The grants also point to an interest in organizations that sit close to the research ecosystem, such as the Michael J Fox Foundation in New York, which received $25,000 in 2023 for the same cure-oriented purpose.
Typical grants cluster at $25,000, with a median of $25,000 and a p75 of $50,000; the recent list also includes a $100,000 award, which sits above that pattern. The foundation’s 2023 grants all share the same purpose language, suggesting project-specific funding rather than unrestricted general support. The recipient list shows repeated support in the same year to organizations tied to Parkinson’s and related conditions, but the provided data does not show multi-year recurrence across different years. Light of Day Foundation Inc is a public charity, not an individual-giving funder, and it does not make program-related investments.
$205K
$343K
$351K
$432K
Most grants fall between $25K and $50K, with a median of $25K.
25th Percentile
$25K
Median
$25K
75th Percentile
$50K
About 20% of grants go to recipients in NY.
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Grantmaking is regional, with the highest concentration in New York. All five recent grants went to U.S. recipients, and one-fifth of grants were made to organizations in the foundation’s home state of New Jersey. The recent recipient cities include New York, Timonium, and Red Bank. New York appears most often among the named recent recipients, reflecting the state’s role as the top giving state rather than the foundation’s headquarters.
The foundation supports organizations working on Parkinson’s disease, ALS, and PSP, along with music- and arts-based fundraising and community programs. Recent grants went to disease-focused groups such as Parkinson's Foundation, Cure Psp, and the Michael J Fox Foundation, as well as Joan Dancy and Pals, which serves affected individuals and communities.
The typical award is $25,000. The reported distribution is p25 of $25,000, a median of $25,000, and p75 of $50,000, with one larger recent grant of $100,000.
New York is the top state by grant count. In the recent grant list, recipients in New York include Parkinson's Foundation, Michael J Fox Foundation, and Kristen Ann Carr Fund, while New Jersey recipients account for 20% of grants.
Its stated purpose is to use the power of music to raise money and awareness to fight Parkinson’s disease and related illnesses, including ALS and PSP, and to support affected individuals and communities. The recent grants are all labeled “assist research in finding a cure,” showing a strong research-oriented emphasis.
No. The foundation is listed as not funding individuals and not making program-related investments. Its recent grants all go to organizations rather than people.
2023
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2023.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PARKINSON'S FOUNDATION | NEW YORK, NY | $100,000 | 2023 | ASSIST RESEARCH IN FINDING A CURE |
| CURE PSP | TIMONIUM, MD | $50,000 | 2023 | ASSIST RESEARCH IN FINDING A CURE |
| JOAN DANCY AND PALS | RED BANK, NJ | $25,000 | 2023 | ASSIST RESEARCH IN FINDING A CURE |
| MICHAEL J FOX FOUNDATION | NEW YORK, NY | $25,000 | 2023 | ASSIST RESEARCH IN FINDING A CURE |
| KRISTEN ANN CARR FUND | NEW YORK, NY | $5,200 | 2023 | ASSIST RESEARCH IN FINDING A CURE |
PARKINSON'S FOUNDATION
$100,000ASSIST RESEARCH IN FINDING A CURE
CURE PSP
$50,000ASSIST RESEARCH IN FINDING A CURE
JOAN DANCY AND PALS
$25,000ASSIST RESEARCH IN FINDING A CURE
MICHAEL J FOX FOUNDATION
$25,000ASSIST RESEARCH IN FINDING A CURE
KRISTEN ANN CARR FUND
$5,200ASSIST RESEARCH IN FINDING A CURE