Representative Heather Bagnall Contact information
Here you will find contact information for Representative Heather Bagnall, including email address, phone number, and mailing address.
Name | Heather Bagnall |
Position | Representative |
State | state representatives Maryland |
Party | Democratic |
Email Form | |
Website | Official Website |
Representative Heather Bagnall
Heather Alice Bagnall Tudball, born on January 17, 1974, is an American politician from the Democratic Party. She is a member of the Maryland House of Delegates representing parts of Anne Arundel County. She represented the 33rd district from 2019 to 2023, afterwards being redrawn into District 33C.
Heather was born in Washington, D.C. She graduated from Broadneck High School and attended Wagner College and Towson University, where she received a Bachelor of Science degree in theatre performances. She later attended additional studies at The Second City in Chicago. After graduating from Towson, Bagnall worked as an arts educator at the Holton-Arms School. She also worked as a playwright and staff member for the Disney Cruise Line.
In 2011, Bagnall founded Tasty Monster Productions with her partner, Luke Tudball, whom she had met while overseas. In February 2018, Bagnall announced that she would run for the Maryland Senate in District 33, challenging incumbent state senator Edward R. Reilly. She later withdrew her candidacy and instead ran for the Maryland House of Delegates. Bagnall won the general election in an upset on November 6, 2018, placing third and edging out incumbent state delegate Tony McConkey by a margin of 185 votes. She is the first Democrat and the first woman to represent District 33 in the Maryland General Assembly since the retirement of state delegate Marsha G. Perry in 1998. Bagnall was sworn in on January 9, 2019. She is a member of the Health and Government Operations Committee.
On a personal note, Bagnall is married to her husband, Luke Nicholas Dillon-Tudball. In June 2018, following the Capital Gazette shooting, Bagnall’s brother, Jason, became distraught and began ranting about communism, conspiracy theories, and mass shootings. Heather tried to de-escalate the situation when she saw Jason sitting on the edge of his bathtub with a sawed-off shotgun, telling her to leave. She left the house and met up with her father at a nearby shopping center from where they called 9-1-1. Heather later filed for a protective order against Jason, who was charged with second-degree assault in connection with the incident. During Jason’s trial in April 2019, Heather testified that he had threatened her, but not with a gun pointed at her as the police report alleged, and said that the family hoped to get Jason help with what they believed was an undiagnosed mental health condition.