DECATUR — When Breana Bagley was 8, she watched the Miss America pageant on TV, wearing a homemade sash that read “Miss America.”
“I had no idea then how many women dream of stepping on that stage,” said Bagley, 27, who competed in Miss America this year as Miss Illinois. She grew up in Decatur and Mount Zion, attended South Shores School and later, Mount Zion schools.
A graduate of Millikin University and Southern Illinois University School of Law, she is the first practicing attorney to serve as Miss Illinois and only the second practicing attorney to compete in Miss America.
Bagley works at Citizens Equity First Credit Union as assistant chief legal counsel and compliance counsel in Peoria, while also making frequent trips back to Decatur to serve as caregiver for her mother, Kathy, who has been diagnosed with idiopathic chronic pancreatitis.
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“I’m always on the road,” she said.
Bagley competed nine previous times for the title of Miss Illinois, starting at age 18, and was runner up six consecutive times before winning. Now that she is serving as Miss Illinois and has competed for Miss America, she can no longer compete, but she is enthusiastic about completing her year as Miss Illinois. She has dedicated that year to working with the National Pancreas Foundation.

Breana Bagley competes in the evening gown category at the Miss America pageant in Orlando, Florida.
“I have dedicated my year of service as Miss Illinois and career as an attorney to being a vision of hope for those with pancreatic and rare diseases, like my mother,” Bagley said.
Her efforts include recruiting campers, nurses and doctors for Camp Hope, a pediatric pancreatitis summer camp which will be held in June in San Antonio; speaking at the University of Chicago for the National Pancreas Foundation in two weeks; and speaking at a national symposium on the topic of chronic complex patient care from the legal perspective.
She is also working toward having a scholarship set aside for women in law, in the hope of increasing the number of women in that profession.
The pageant, held Jan. 4-5 in Orlando, Florida, included a private interview, an on-stage question, evening gown and fitness competitions. Fitness has replaced the bathing suit competition.

The fitness competition replaced bathing suit in Miss America. Contestants are given workout gear by an athletic sponsor at the pageant and are judged based on physical fitness.
Miss America is one of the few pageants that includes a talent competition, Bagley said, and as a dancer since the age of 2, she chose to do a lyrical dance to Celine Dion’s “A New Day Has Come.” Because Bagley’s career and Miss Illinois focus is on those with rare diseases, the song, which is about Dion’s struggles with a rare disease, seemed the most appropriate.

Breana Bagley performed a lyrical dance in the Miss America competition to the Celine Dion song “A New Day Has Come,” which the artist recorded regarding her own struggles, and Bagley chose it as an homage to her mother, Kathy.
She works in compliance and cybersecurity for CEFCU, and the company has been completely supportive, she said. “My CEO and administrative staff all came to watch me get on the plane for Miss America,” Bagley said. “That is so necessary for women in such a male-dominated field, to have that support.”
The winner, Abbie Stockard, 22, a nursing student at Auburn University in Alabama, was “a light” throughout the pageant, Bagley said.
“You can see me and Miss Alaska jumping up and down and cheering for her (when her name was announced),” Bagley said.
And while she didn’t walk away as Miss America, Bagley’s headshot, private interview outfit and evening gowns were all voted “best” in their categories.
“I did walk away with the spirit of Miss America,” she said. “You walk on that stage as a winner, and you walk off that stage as a winner, whether you walk away as Miss America or not.”
Photos: Miss America through the years

FILE – Contestants in the first Miss America pageant line up for the judges in Atlantic City, N.J., in September 1921. The competition is marking its 100th anniversary on Thursday, Dec. 16, 2021, having managed to maintain a complicated spot in American culture with a questionable relevancy. (AP Photo/File)

FILE – Contenders for the title of Miss America line up on the Boardwalk at Atlantic City, N.J., on Sept. 2, 1952. In the late 1930s, 40s and 50s, minority women were excluded from competition by “rule number seven,” which stated that contestants had to be “of good health and of the white race.” Having managed to maintain a complicated spot in American culture, the competition is marking its 100th anniversary, on Thursday, Dec. 16, 2021. (AP Photo/File)

FILE – Saundra Williams, 19, center, of Philadelphia, is crowned the first Miss Black America at ceremonies in Atlantic City, N.J., flanked by first runner-up Theresa Claytor, 20, right, and second runner-up Linda Johnson, 21, left, Sept. 8, 1968. The contest was held to revolt against the lack of diversity in the Miss America competition, which is marking its 100th anniversary on Thursday, Dec. 16, 2021, having managed to maintain a controversial spot in American culture. (AP Photo/File)

FILE – Miss America 1989 Gretchen Carlson, left, and first runner up, Maryland’s Virginia Cha, center, watch as Missouri’s Debbye Turner throws her arms up in jubilation after winning Miss America 1990 in Atlantic City, N.J., Sept. 16, 1989. Carlson was part of an all-female leadership team that took over the Miss America organization after a 2018 email scandal in which male leaders insulted former Miss Americas, and helped to eliminate judging on physical appearance. (AP photo/Tom Patrick, File)

FILE – Miss Florida Ericka Dunlap, center, reacts as outgoing Miss America Erika Harold, right, crowns her Miss America 2004, while host Tom Bergeron holds onto her during the Miss America Competition in Atlantic City, N.J., Saturday, Sept. 20, 2003. Dunlap, who graduated from college debt-free, founded her own public relations firm and became a TV personality said, “I think that people have the wrong idea about what Miss America is all about, because it’s not just about getting dressed up and being prim and proper and being perfect on stage.” (AP Photo/Daniel Hulshizer, File)

FILE – Shawntel Smith Wuerch, left, Miss America 1996, shows the organization’s homepage with help from student Quinesha Farr, 11, during a visit to showcase advance internet technology at Fuller Elementary School in Little Rock, Ark., Feb. 8, 1996. A donation from Smith Wuerch and her husband made it possible to award a top scholarship of $100,000 to this year’s winner of the Miss America crown, marking 100 years of the competition, on Thursday, Dec. 16, 2021. (AP Photo/Spencer Tirey, File)

FILE – In this file photo, 2016 Miss America pageant contestants show themselves in swimsuits as they compete in Atlantic City, N.J., Sept. 13, 2015. In 2018, the pageant announced it would no longer judge contestants in their appearance. (AP Photo/Mel Evans, File)

FILE – Virginia’s Camille Schrier, left, walks the stage after winning the Miss America competition at the Mohegan Sun casino in Uncasville, Conn., Dec. 19, 2019. The Miss America competition is marking its 100th anniversary on Thursday, Dec. 16, 2021, managing to maintain a complicated spot in American culture. With viewership down, the event now held at the Mohegan Sun casino in southeastern Connecticut, is moving from broadcast television to NBC’s streaming Peacock service this year. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File)

FILE – Vanessa Williams, the first Black woman to win the Miss America crown, in 1984, speaks at a news conference to announce she would relinquish her title over a nude photo scandal, July 23, 1984. The Miss America organization, which apologized to Williams in 2015 over the resignation, is marking its 100th anniversary on Thursday, Dec. 16, 2021, having managed to maintain a complicated spot in American culture. (AP Photo/File)
Contact Valerie Wells at (217) 421-7982. Follow her on Twitter: @modgirlreporter