Normally in these situations the standard ( aside from the horrid PFC and RFI it causes without a decent filter on the input side) is to have a half bridge, with regular diodes on the negative lead, and have 3 thyristors on the positive side, with the gate anode being driven by a pulse transformer, so that you can control the point where they start to conduct on each mains cycle. This allows you to drop the voltage on the output capacitor, or at least control the peak voltage it will be charged to, by triggering the thyristors later on in the mains cycle, so as to reduce the conduction angle and thus the current into the capacitor/load side.
Using transistors and making them conduct early means that you are basically feeding one phase back to another, which will lead to problems of high circulating currents in the transistors, and will not really give you any voltage control as the BE junctions of the transistors break down in reverse.