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 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).
All of Shakespeare's plays were dramas, so here are the names of two of them: Cymbeline and Timon of Athens.
Shakespeare wrote this play for the same reason he wrote all of his plays: to make money.
Shakespeare wrote two revenge plays: Hamlet and Titus Andronicus.
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)
Shakespeare's last few plays were The Two Noble Kinsmen, Henry VIII and Cardenio, which is now lost. These were written with John Fletcher.
The Tempest is widely considered to be the last survivingplay written by William Shakespeare alone, and was performed by the King's Men in November 1611.Shakespeare also collaborated on at least two plays after this time with a man called John Fletcher; All is True (Henry VIII) (c.1613) and The Two Noble Kinsmen (1613-14). There is evidence to suggest they also wrote Cardenio but this script does not survive.As with so much of Shakespeare's life and works there is much that is not known. It is possible that the widely accepted chronology of his plays is not correct and possibly that there were other plays of which no record survives.ADDED: There is also some evidence that Shakespeare contributed to yet another play, Double Falsehood but that is contested.
Hamlet, Juluis Caeser, Othello, Romeo and Juliet.
Scholars think he stopped writing in 1613. His last few plays were written with his successor, John Fletcher and included The Two Noble Kinsmen, Pericles, and Cardenio.