HIMYMCast Had Fundraising Parties on Set After Co-Creator's Son Was Diagnosed with Rare Disorder. It's Now a Fan Event (Exclusive)

Mar. 15, 2025

(L-R) Craig Thomas; Jason Segel, Alyson Hannigan, Neil Patrick Harris, Josh Radnor and Cobie Smulders.Photo:Brent N. Clarke/FilmMagic; M. Caulfield/WireImage

Creators of “How I Met Your Mother” Craig Thomas attends the “Artist Welcome/Industry Keynote uring the 12th Annual New York Television Festival held at Helen Mills Theater on October 24, 2016 in New York City. Cast of “How I Met Your Mother” presents award for Favorite TV Comedy

Brent N. Clarke/FilmMagic; M. Caulfield/WireImage

TheHow I Met Your Mothercommunity is powerful, to say the least.

When series co-creatorCraig Thomas' son Elliot was born with a rare genetic disorder during the show’s earlier seasons, the cast and crew came together in a big way. Turning pain into purpose, the group used the show’s soundstage to host music-filled fundraising events, benefitting related research.

In the years since the show concluded its nine-season run in 2014, the fundraising effort has been opened up to the iconic sitcom’s fandom through a live charity concert where Thomas and fellow co-creator Carter Bays performHow I Met Your Mothersongs with their band,The Solids. Its third annual event took place on Saturday, Jan. 11 at The Bowery Ballroom in Manhattan’s Bowery neighborhood, and featured participation from some of the former CBS series stars.

Now, Thomas tells PEOPLE exclusively exactly how the legen-wait for it-dary phenomenon came to be and the importance ofDr. Paul Grossfeld’s ongoing research.

Craig Thomas is pictured performing during The Solids' benefit concert in New York City on January 11, 2025.Aaron Hoffman/Aegis Photography

HIMYM Cast and Crew Had Fundraising Parties on Set After Co-Creator Craig Thomas’s Son Was Diagnosed with a Rare Disorder. It’s Now an Event for Fans

Aaron Hoffman/Aegis Photography

“Between years two and three ofHow I Met Your Mother, my son was born, and to our shock, without having known anything in utero, he had this rare syndrome, my son Elliot, calledJacobsen syndrome,” Thomas, 49, tells PEOPLE exclusively of his son’s condition. “It’s a deletion, a little piece of one of the 11th chromosomes missing. The fact that that’s missing has all these different ramifications—health ramifications, developmental ramifications—and again, it was a complete curveball.”

Craig Thomas (R) and his son Elliot are pictured performing during The Solids' benefit concert in New York City on January 11, 2025.Aaron Hoffman/Aegis Photography

HIMYM Cast and Crew Had Fundraising Parties on Set After Co-Creator Craig Thomas’s Son Was Diagnosed with a Rare Disorder. It’s Now an Event for Fans

Thomas' son Elliot, whom he shares with wife Rebecca Alson-Milkman (and the couple also share a daughter named Celia), needed to undergo open heart surgery at just two weeks old when he was “weighing about three and a half pounds,” the screenwriter recalls.

“Honestly, I think the drama of Elliot’s birth in between years two and three [of]How I Met Your Motherinformed how the show got more dramatic and emotional in certain ways,” he shares. “Even though we didn’t literally talk about it, ‘Do a storyline about Elliot,’ or anything like that, the tone made its way. Sometimes,How I Met Your Motheris called a comedy that is very emo. I think there was real emo stuff going on in my life that informed things. The whole writing staff was so with me on that journey, and it just made its way into the room.”

Noting how one can “feel so lost and hopeless when these things happen,” Thomas says: “We were just in the dark, wandering around a dark cave. And then, like a little light, a little candle got lit, and that was Dr. Grossfeld. We found him online. He’s the only doctor researching Elliot’s specific condition in America. He is the person doing the research, publishing the papers, finding out how to treat and support and help these children, and saving lives in so doing.”

Dr. Paul Grossfeld, whose research was being spotlighted during The Solids' Jan. 11 concert (and proceeds from the event benefitted his ongoing work), has “made enormous progress” over the last several years, he reveals.

“The cause of congenital heart defects is not known, even though we think it’s mostly genetic, but it’s largely unknown,” says Dr. Grossfeld, who currently works within the pediatric cardiology lab atRady Children’s Hospital-San Diego.

“My thinking is if you understand the cause and the mechanism, you can come up with better treatments and maybe, even eventually, get good at it,” he explains. “[In] my first month of training in cardiology, I was taking care of a child because of his heart defects, and he happened to have a rare chromosomal disorder called Jacobsen syndrome. This was in the 1990s.”

“I basically postulated that there must be a gene or genes in that region that’s lost. That’s the cause of these heart defects, not necessarily just in the kids with Jacobsen syndrome, but in the broader population of the 1% of all people that are born with heart defects,” he continues. “And so, that was the beginning.”

Dr. Paul Grossfeld takes the stage at The Solids' benefit concert in New York City on January 11, 2025.Aaron Hoffman/Aegis Photography

HIMYM Cast and Crew Had Fundraising Parties on Set After Co-Creator Craig Thomas’s Son Was Diagnosed with a Rare Disorder. It’s Now an Event for Fans

Thomas points out that it’s “hard to find funding for research for rare syndromes,” but that hasn’t stopped him and Dr. Grossfeld’s fight, which was commemorated in a big way onHow I Met Your Mother’s legendary Los Angeles-area set.

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“After a few years of knowing Paul, and as I got older, I said, ‘What if we use the support of theHow I Met Your Mothercommunity and fandom and find a way to enlist their help to support Paul’s work,'” Thomas recalls. “At first, that took the form of, we did these two very big fundraisers on [the]How I Met Your Mothersoundstage on the Fox lot. Stage 22 on the Fox lot. These really big parties.”

The Solids are pictured performing with guests during their benefit concert in New York City on January 11, 2025.Aaron Hoffman/Aegis Photography

HIMYM Cast and Crew Had Fundraising Parties on Set After Co-Creator Craig Thomas’s Son Was Diagnosed with a Rare Disorder. It’s Now an Event for Fans

For the occasion, which was the brainchild of Thomas’ wife Rebecca Alson-Milkman, the set would be decorated accordingly and the show’s producers, who Thomas says would help “find little ways to get money and get free things from vendors and to get this or that. So much of it happened without my having to work hard on it.”

“It just felt like using our little wonderful universe we had all created to do something good. It was absolutely joyful,” he continues. “And for me, my son was still so young at that point. It just felt like everyone coming together to help [during] a hard time I was going through and help do something good for the people that are trying to help kids like my son. So I would leave those events and just cry for an hour out of sheer gratitude.”

(L-R) Neil Patrick Harris, Cobie Smulders, Josh Radnor, Jason Segel and Alyson Hannigan star in the CBS television series How I Met Your Mother.CBS via Getty

Neil Patrick Harris, Cobie Smulders, Josh Radnor, Jason Segel and Alyson Hannigan star in the CBS television series “How I Met Your Mother.

CBS via Getty

Yet, that wasn’t the end of how Thomas and theHow I Met Your Mothercommunity would continue to raise proceeds in support of Dr. Grossfeld’s research. The “new idea” proved to be a winning one, resulting in increased awareness and subsequent funding for a good cause.

“How I Met Your Motherfans are so amazing and the love for the show has extended beyond anything I could have ever hoped for. I’m so grateful to them,” Thomas begins.

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Carter Bays and Ashley Williams are pictured performing during The Solids' benefit concert in New York City on January 11, 2025.Aaron Hoffman/Aegis Photography

HIMYM Cast and Crew Had Fundraising Parties on Set After Co-Creator Craig Thomas’s Son Was Diagnosed with a Rare Disorder. It’s Now an Event for Fans

Carter Bays and Will Forte are pictured performing during The Solids' benefit concert in New York City on January 11, 2025.Aaron Hoffman/Aegis Photography

HIMYM Cast and Crew Had Fundraising Parties on Set After Co-Creator Craig Thomas’s Son Was Diagnosed with a Rare Disorder. It’s Now an Event for Fans

The Jan. 11 show marks their third event of its kind. Having previously been in a smaller yet still iconic N.Y.C. venue, Mercury Lounge, the charitable event’s 2025 edition was held at The Bowery Ballroom. It was a sold-out affair.

For Radnor, choosing to continuously partake in the charitable event is a no-brainer.

“I love Craig. There’s ways to love your friends that are more obvious, and then there’s other ways to love your friends. I just feel like this is an act of love for my friend. I remember so well what it was like when Elliot was born, and Craig talking so lovingly about Paul,” Radnor, who recently released his second solo record,Eulogy, Vol II, tells PEOPLE.

Carter Bays an Josh Radnor are pictured performing during The Solids' benefit concert in New York City on January 11, 2025.Aaron Hoffman/Aegis Photography

HIMYM Cast and Crew Had Fundraising Parties on Set After Co-Creator Craig Thomas’s Son Was Diagnosed with a Rare Disorder. It’s Now an Event for Fans

“I remember hearing something on NPR years ago. A woman was talking about [how] her husband had some degenerative kind of brain disease and she said, ‘No celebrities have this disease and no celebrities’ children have this disease, so it’s incredibly hard to get funding. It’s incredibly hard to get funding for it,'” he continues. “That really stayed with me because I was like, oh, the weirdness of Craig’s kid having this, and Craig having access to this whole world of people who could possibly help. It just felt like the easiest call in the world to answer where you’re like, ‘Oh yeah, I can show up and help bring a spotlight onto this thing and this man’s research that saved Elliot’s life.'”

“It’s just this thing that feels personal to me in the best way, but it’s really just me like loving and supporting my friend, at the end of the day,” theLiberal Artsdirector adds.

To learn more about Dr. Paul Grossfeld’s research and how to support his efforts, head to the linkhere.

source: people.com