Career
She was blond and petite. Her true surname was Froidevaux. Forbes was 16 when she was chosen Mission United State in the Paris International Beauty Pageant of 1926.
She became a showgirl in New York City at the age of 17 in 1927.
She was hired away from Florenz Ziegfeld and his Ziegfeld Follies by Broadway theatre producer Earl Carroll. This was for a January 1929 production at his Earl Carroll Theatre.
Carroll tempted Forbes with a substantial offer for a new dance review. Forbes married automobile salesman, Harry Judson, in 1928.
In 1931 she wed Paul O. Richmond in Kennedyville, Maryland.
They were happy together but Richmond died suddenly in 1932. He left Forbes a fortune estimated at $3,000,000 from his toothpaste and hair shampoo interests. After Richmond"s death, Forbes went to Hollywood and made Bachelor Bait and Down to Their Last Yacht, both films from 1934.
She received a series of threatening letters which dissuaded her from continuing in motion pictures.
She donated her salary as a movie extra to charity because of the money she was willed by Richmond. Playboy Richman was well known for his earlier romances with Clara Bow, Dorothy Darrell, showgirl Edith Roark, Virginia Biddle, Lina Basquette, Peggy Hopkins Joyce, and Lenore Ulric.
He and Forbes shared a sumptuous home in Beechurst, Long Island. Shortly after their wedding, Forbes contracted pneumonia and was saved, in part, through the use of the drug sulfanilimide.
The couple considered adopting a baby.
By 1942, Forbes was divorced from Richman and was being wooed by millionaire Max Bamberger. Hazel Forbes died in 1980 in Los Angeles, California. She is buried in the Great Mausoleum at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California.