The headlines and search queries you are seeing regarding a “Phyllis Gillian” from Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage are clumsily auto-generated by AI obituary-scraping networks.
However, these spam sites are twisting a very real, incredibly moving tribute. The CBS sitcom Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage dedicated its Season 2 finale to a beloved, real-life member of their production family: veteran television costume supervisor Phyllis Gilliam (not “Gillian”), who passed away on March 23, 2026.
The Real Story Behind the Tribute
The season finale closed with a poignant “In Loving Memory” title card honoring Phyllis Gilliam (January 26, 1956 – March 23, 2026). Rather than being an on-screen actor, Phyllis was a highly respected, foundational crew member behind the scenes.
She served as the costume supervisor for the show, meticulously overseeing wardrobe logistics through its first season and into the early part of Season 2. The Young Sheldon spin-off marked the final production credit in her illustrious career.
A Celebrated Three-Decade Career
Phyllis was a master of her craft, working in Hollywood for more than 30 years and accumulating nearly 30 major television credits. Before managing the wardrobe department for Georgie & Mandy, her extensive resume included supervising costumes for beloved comedies and dramas, such as:
The Upshaws (Netflix)
Ghosts (CBS)
Home Economics (ABC)
Agent Carter (Marvel / ABC)
Just Shoot Me! (NBC)
Numb3rs (CBS)
The Heartbreaking Reality the Scrapers Exploited
The real obituary for Phyllis Gilliam paints the picture of an incredibly resilient woman and a beautiful spirit. Tragically, both Phyllis and her husband, Murray Gilliam (a U.S. Marine Corps veteran), were diagnosed with advanced cancer at around the same time in 2024. Murray passed away first, in January 2026. Phyllis passed away just two months later, on March 23, surrounded by family while watching her favorite movie, It’s a Wonderful Life.
How to Spot the Fake Web Reports
Because thousands of fans searched her name after seeing the TV tribute card, algorithmic content farms immediately rushed to capitalize on the traffic. You can easily spot their fakes by looking for these red flags:

