Charles Mark Edward Boxer (19 May 1931 – 20 July 1988) was a British magazine editor and social observer, and a political cartoonist and graphic portrait artist working under the pen-name ‘Marc’.
There he created a format imitated by all UK Sunday broadsheet newspapers, and was responsible for commissioning such leading artists, photographers and writers of the 1960s as Peter Blake, David Hockney, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Don McCullin, Angus Wilson and John Mortimer.
After a brief period as a book publisher at Weidenfeld & Nicolson, Boxer accepted the editorship of the revived Tatler at Condé Nast Publications in 1983, for which he won the PA Editor of the Year award in 1986.
Boxer followed this with the production of a long series of pocket cartoons, single frame social commentaries which were published first in The Times, and subsequently in The Guardian.
Boxer also produced a series of drawings of characters to illustrate the covers of Anthony Powell’s 12-volume novel, A Dance to the Music of Time.
Boxer's first marriage was to Lady Arabella Stuart, youngest daughter of the eighteenth Earl of Moray, with whom he had two children.