All of Shakespeare's plays were dramas, so here are the names of two of them: Cymbeline and Timon of Athens.
Shakespeare wrote many plays but these are just two of them. Macbeth and Hamlet.
Shakespeare wrote his plays in the rein of two monarchs, Elizabeth I and James I of England.
Shakespeare wrote 37 plays (38 if you count The Two Noble Kinsmen).
Shakespeare wrote this play for the same reason he wrote all of his plays: to make money.
If he was still working on writing plays, he wasn't retired. Shakespeare did not write any plays after he retired. Henry VIII and The Two Noble Kinsmen were the last plays he wrote and he wrote them just before his retirement.
Shakespeare wrote two revenge plays: Hamlet and Titus Andronicus.
He was an actor. He was partner in a company of actors. He owned a part interest in two theatres. He wrote plays. He may have taken the role of what we now call a director (our knowledge of how Elizabethan and Jacobean plays were directed is not great).
Shakespeare wrote mostly plays but he is also famous for his poetry. His plays cover a remarkable breadth of human experience. He even wrote about dogs. (In The Two Gentlemen of Verona)
Comedy and Tragedy. Although actually Shakespeare wrote as many Histories as he did Tragedies (10). Comedies were what he wrote the most (18).
Hamlet, Juluis Caeser, Othello, Romeo and Juliet.
Shakespeare wrote a play called The Two Gentlemen of Verona.
Shakespeare wrote 154 sonnets, 28 plays and two long poems (maybe 3, if you count the Turtle and the Phoenix)